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Old October 19th 09, 04:51 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Shenan Stanley
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Posts: 10,523
Default urgent, edison cutting power

Dallas wrote:
i jusat rememberd, less than 2 hours away from edison doing
maintenance of the neighborhood - power will be off from 10:00
5:00. now as long as the pc is off, are there any problems ahead ?
i doubt it, but want to make sure.


Shenan Stanley wrote:
What?

Since most are unlikely to live where you do...

Anyway - whether or not you have surge protection (best would be a
Universal Power Supply (UPS) with Auto Voltage Regulation (AVR)
technology) for your electronics and/or home - my suggestion is to
unplug from the wall any electronic equipment that is important to
you and not plug it back in until you know the maintenance is over
with and the power should stay consistent.
Also - I would suggest getting a UPS with AVR technology for each
of your sensitive/expensive electronic devices (Televisions, any
computer equipment, etc). Some equipment may not be able to
utilize the battery-backed up side - but those types of equipment should
be fine plugged in
elsewhere (some printers have trouble in this way.)



Dallas wrote:
thanks so much shenan, but since i forgot, it's too late for the
stuff other than the ups - i do have the ups hooked up, but i
didn't think it would last for 7 hours


The purpose of consumer UPS is not to keep a home user up and going for long
periods of time - but long enough to properly shut down.

I was not implying you should have UPSes to keep things up - but because a
UPS with AVR technology will provide your equipment with cleaner power and
have a better response time to surges/brownouts than a plain surge protector
(which is often nothing more than a mechanical device - a fuse - which
prevents "too much" of the surge from getting to your equipment) - better
protect your equipment from the unexpected outages.

In other words - your equipment is better served with something like a UPS
with AVR than cheap surge protection alone for unexpected outages and if you
know power will be out and suddenly turned back on at some point - it's best
to plan for that accordingly and unplug valuable devices so there is no
danger of a surge at all to said equipment. Something not plugged into a
wall outlet is 99.99999...% less likely affected by such things than
something plugged into the wall outlet. ;-)

--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html


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