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CyberPower UT Series UPS: UT650EG $70.40 ($68.64 eBay Plus), UT850EG $95.20 ($90 eBay Plus) Delivered @ Shopping Express eBay

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BTSR22BTSR20PLUSNS23

CyberPower introduces UT Series energy-saving tower UPS for budget concious buyers.

Features

Energy-saving UPS systems save up to 93% of power consumption
Designed for home and office applications, the UT Series adopts line-interactive topology with Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR) function to offer stabilized AC power output. The patented GreenPower UPS™ Bypass design achieves ultra-low power consumption to reduce energy costs. The LED indicator shows the utility, battery and operating status of the UPS. Other features include overload protection, EMI filter and configurable alarm to safeguard your devices.

For eBay Plus members, the UT850EG is cheaper using PLUSNS23 coupon code on the following link

CyberPower UT850EG 425W 850VA 3 Outlets UPS


EDIT (23 Jan 2023):

Shopping Express has a bundle deal for $99 + free delivery till 25 Jan 2023.

CyberPower UT850EG 425W 850VA 3 Outlets UPS + Bonus CyberPower 8-Port Surge Protector


Original BTSR22 BTSR20 Coupon Deal

Original PLUSNS23 Coupon Deal

Related Stores

eBay Australia
eBay Australia
Marketplace
Shopping Express
Shopping Express

closed Comments

  • +3

    just a heads up, these low value UPS, are just to turn off your computer cleanly in a power outage. The higher end ones (300$+ ones) allow you a bit more leeway in regards to completing what you are doing and then power off.
    I recently had a power outage due to placing up a new pole outside and the UPS powered the 431L Samsung Fridge for an hour.

    • +8

      It’s the wattage and battery size that depicts how long the equipment can be run for - not the class (budget vs premium).

  • Does this have a USB plug to tell NAS to shutdown?

    • +1

      For the UT850EG, yes, it's at the front, rather than usual on the back.

  • Could this power a modem and wifi router for a few hours during a power outage?

    • Yes. To get good idea of runtime, note down the power consumption of your equipment and compare with spec sheet of UPS. There usually is graph that tells how long the UPS will run for at x% of load.

      • Just looking at one.
        Specs are confusing.

        E.g. says 850VA capacity yet only 425w capacity. Isn't power = voltage X current?

        Then below it says it can only run a 60w load for 30minutes…
        If it's 425w, shouldn't it be able to run 60w for 7hrs?

        • VA (Volt-Amp) refers to Apparent power in AC, whereas Watts refer to Real power. You can google for explanations but for the sake of runtime or load calculations, ignore VA value and only use Watts value.

          Runtime graph can be viewed here. As you can see, it is not a linear graph. 50w of continuous load gives you 44 min. This is true. However, I doubt your router and modem is going to consume more than 20w (for example, I have modem, router, 24-port switch, rpi 3 and 3 poe cameras and total consumption is around 30w at idle). I’m getting 5+ hours of runtime with 960w (1600VA) UPS. So for an average modem and router, expecting 2+ hours with 425w UPS would not be unreasonable.

          • @OldSchoolHarry: Don't forget to factor in battery aging over time.

            I've got an older 650VA version and while I'd get half an hour for my router when brand new, now after three years I can't get much more than 10 minutes - despite being the same load at about 30W. I can replace the batteries again, sure, but it doesn't make much financial sense after a couple of swaps.

            I'd love to get/build a LiPo UPS with an inverter instead of the usual transformer like these all have… but I hesitate to think of the upfront cost for the same capacity!

  • Thanks ordered the smaller one. Couldn't justify the price difference for the larger one

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