Curious as to what happened--did it get cancelled or something else?Well, I'm done with this website. They're a bunch of morons.
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Curious as to what happened--did it get cancelled or something else?Well, I'm done with this website. They're a bunch of morons.
They do, and there's a risk of shipping damage. But for a $1000 off, it's worth the risk to some.those UPS have to cost an arm to ship
what? details?Nice finds!
I kinda stopped looking for ssd deals in the outlet as retail prices have been cheaper lately. Like the Micron 4tb deal that's still in stock--nothing touches that so far aside from used enterprise sas ssds.
This search:Anybody found a decent color laser MFP either CDW outlet or elsewhere for $200 or less preferably with Linkyo [or other] replacement toner compatible? looking for something decent for my mother. Thanks.
This search:
https://www.cdw.com/search/?key=laser&outlet=1&searchscope=all&sr=1&SortBy=PriceAsc&maxrecords=72
yielded the following in your price range:
https://www.cdw.com/product/hp-color-laserjet-pro-mfp-m180nw-bs/5593950?pfm=srh - $105
https://www.cdw.com/product/lexmark-cx522ade-color-laser-35ppm/5593972?pfm=srh - $194
https://www.cdw.com/product/brother-mfcl8610cdw-color-laser-mfp/5618636?pfm=srh - $219
I would not worry about the price of replacement toner unless your mother is printing more than 10 pages a day. Those of us that own lasers at home can't remember the last time we bought toner.
Sweet. Be sure to call them Monday to confirm that the order it placed and it went through. Even if you get a confirmation the order may still get cancelled if the unit wasn't found when they went to 'pick' it (in warehouse speak). Shipping might be a bomb too so make sure you're ready for that. Otherwise, you got it at a steal of a price as even a techforless open box is almost $400 and a new one from B&H is $600.Awesome, thanks, SamirD. I ordered the Lexmark.
What size you looking for? I'll take a look in a sec and see what I find.SamirD A buddy of mine and a (and a silent lurker here) is looking for a UPS, 120v input for his NAS and workstation (or two). Anything come up recently? Kinda looking at non-rackmount solutions.
also important is do you want pure sinewave? interactive or online? The one I just got is awesome.SamirD A buddy of mine and a (and a silent lurker here) is looking for a UPS, 120v input for his NAS and workstation (or two). Anything come up recently? Kinda looking at non-rackmount solutions.
Pure sinwave isn't critical, really.Eh. Hard to say. He's running a Synology and he's dealing with only very short outages. Enough to trip everything off, but only a matter of seconds. I'm not good at sizing these things.
get a kilavolt meter but its only a UPS it should be at most a few 100 watts at peak unless something massive like my set up (norco 4224 full loaded)Eh. Hard to say. He's running a Synology and he's dealing with only very short outages. Enough to trip everything off, but only a matter of seconds. I'm not good at sizing these things.
get a kilavolt meter but its only a UPS it should be at most a few 100 watts at peak unless something massive like my set up (norco 4224 full loaded)
Also the 120v onlines are way way cheaper than what i got. They had some nice ones last couple weeks going for 200!
yea see my update. I consider this a long term ionvestment and best to buy a sold item iof you cna afford it. I used cheap stuff for ages because i couldnt afford a nice thing and found this thread and snagged an awesome dealI mean, I'm running xlm 3000 with four battery extenders, and a smartups-c 1500. I'm good. Even with a 12, 16, and 24 bay supermicro chassis.
My buddy has..nothing. needs something.
yea that cyberpower is a nice unit and the best deal any of us posted.So in a quick search, these tripplite units seem like they're pretty good for a nas and some workstation, but the price needs to drop a little more for them to a solid deal. There's a bunch of them too:
This one would be my solution at $224. It's a 2200va unit that I know can stand up like a tower even though it is rackable. It usually goes for $800+ so it's a solid deal even at the current price, which seems like be the bottom or close to it. The only caveat will be shipping because if they don't pack it right, it will be destroyed by the time you get it. Just be sure to refuse it as damaged if you can at that point because I still haven't gotten a refund on mine that arrived damaged a year ago.
https://www.cdw.com/product/cyberpower-online-2kva-smart-app-bs/5574617?pfm=srh
You're not going to do better than this deal, which looks like it's still available for shipping from their web store for $6 so $106 before any applicable tax - https://www.microcenter.com/product...80-pcie-nvme-30-x4-internal-solid-state-drive For further reading on this drive see https://hardforum.com/threads/i-got...land-1tb-nvme-premium-97-microcenter.1978390/ I have this drive in my file server and I can't do anything that makes use of its speed.Waiting to see a fast 1TB m.2 for 150...like an evo plus
You're not going to do better than this deal, which looks like it's still available for shipping from their web store for $6 so $106 before any applicable tax - https://www.microcenter.com/product...80-pcie-nvme-30-x4-internal-solid-state-drive For further reading on this drive see https://hardforum.com/threads/i-got...land-1tb-nvme-premium-97-microcenter.1978390/ I have this drive in my file server and I can't do anything that makes use of its speed.
So in a quick search, these tripplite units seem like they're pretty good for a nas and some workstation, but the price needs to drop a little more for them to a solid deal. There's a bunch of them too:
https://www.cdw.com/search/?key=SMA...hscope=all&sr=1&SortBy=PriceAsc&maxrecords=72
I don't know if this would be enough va, but this medical UPS is about as clean as power gets, and it's probably at the bottom at $139 as it's usually $400+ anywhere:
https://www.cdw.com/product/cyberpower-medical-grade-ups-750va/5583068?pfm=srh
there's a second and 3rd one too that's a little higher in price right now at $174 and $217 if you want to watch the first one hit rock bottom and drop off and then get the others at the rock bottom price:
https://www.cdw.com/product/cyberpower-medical-grade-ups-750va/5593571?pfm=srh
https://www.cdw.com/product/cyberpower-medical-grade-ups-750va/5618886?pfm=srh
This one would be my solution at $224. It's a 2200va unit that I know can stand up like a tower even though it is rackable. It usually goes for $800+ so it's a solid deal even at the current price, which seems like be the bottom or close to it. The only caveat will be shipping because if they don't pack it right, it will be destroyed by the time you get it. Just be sure to refuse it as damaged if you can at that point because I still haven't gotten a refund on mine that arrived damaged a year ago.
https://www.cdw.com/product/cyberpower-online-2kva-smart-app-bs/5574617?pfm=srh
There are a ton of other companies that use the e12 controller, Inland is the Microcenter house brand. I honestly can't speak in greater detail, that thread is a great resource though.I've heard quite a bit about inland drives but have never owned one. I'm gonna use it in a NUC and will have some work related stuff that may only get backed up weekly so dependability is more important to me than speed. The Evos have been the king for awhile, but way overpriced accordingly. Evo Plus 1TB is 209. I may try this inland drive. Do you know how long the company has been around and whats the aprox life cycle on these drives?
Check the plug discussion, just...in case.Samir, you're the man!
I have a 4-bay QNAP with 4x4TB, external backup, and my new i3 9100 Plex server that could use a new battery backup. Do you think that medical grade one for $139 is overkill? I'm really liking that beast 2KVA for $224, but that's getting excessive!
A UPS really only needs to provide enough power for safe shutdown of equipment or short duration power interruptions. That said 2KVA will be overkill, but the bigger the better if you want to withstand a longer outage. My ESXi home server has dual 2011v3 processors with 17 hard drives, and it will remain online for about 20min with a 1.5KVA unit. (along with a 24-port HP switch, standalone pfSense itx firewall, a monitor, 5 PoE cameras, cable modem, and two wireless access points)Samir, you're the man!
I have a 4-bay QNAP with 4x4TB, external backup, and my new i3 9100 Plex server that could use a new battery backup. Do you think that medical grade one for $139 is overkill? I'm really liking that beast 2KVA for $224, but that's getting excessive!
I've heard quite a bit about inland drives but have never owned one. I'm gonna use it in a NUC and will have some work related stuff that may only get backed up weekly so dependability is more important to me than speed. The Evos have been the king for awhile, but way overpriced accordingly. Evo Plus 1TB is 209. I may try this inland drive. Do you know how long the company has been around and whats the aprox life cycle on these drives?
That last Cyberpower linked uses a NEMA L5-20 plug. It won't work for most people/situations.
AFAIK, there are no UPS units out there above 1500 VA that use a standard NEMA 5R-15 plug. There may be some that use NEMA 5R-20 (note the prong rotated 90 deg.), but again, those are rare in a home.
its called adaptersA UPS really only needs to provide enough power for safe shutdown of equipment or short duration power interruptions. That said 2KVA will be overkill, but the bigger the better if you want to withstand a longer outage. My ESXi home server has dual 2011v3 processors with 17 hard drives, and it will remain online for about 20min with a 1.5KVA unit. (along with a 24-port HP switch, standalone pfSense itx firewall, a monitor, 5 PoE cameras, cable modem, and two wireless access points)
its called adapters
plus its online the other is interactive. also it allows for growth.
Good catch! These are the type of things that you have to watch for on outlet items!That last Cyberpower linked uses a NEMA L5-20 plug. It won't work for most people/situations.
AFAIK, there are no UPS units out there above 1500 VA that use a standard NEMA 5R-15 plug. There may be some that use NEMA 5R-20 (note the prong rotated 90 deg.), but again, those are rare in a home.
Samir, you're the man!
I have a 4-bay QNAP with 4x4TB, external backup, and my new i3 9100 Plex server that could use a new battery backup. Do you think that medical grade one for $139 is overkill? I'm really liking that beast 2KVA for $224, but that's getting excessive!
And you can adjust the runtime to whatever you want depending on the load and the capacity. At one of our businesses, we have a 1500va unit on the dvr there as well as 500va on the cameras. It can go several hours without power because of how small the load is in comparison with the capacity.A UPS really only needs to provide enough power for safe shutdown of equipment or short duration power interruptions. That said 2KVA will be overkill, but the bigger the better if you want to withstand a longer outage. My ESXi home server has dual 2011v3 processors with 17 hard drives, and it will remain online for about 20min with a 1.5KVA unit. (along with a 24-port HP switch, standalone pfSense itx firewall, a monitor, 5 PoE cameras, cable modem, and two wireless access points)
This is quite important. I've tripped breakers pulling too many amps to the point power cord prongs would burn the skin and the breaker panel was hot to the touch--I never want to get in that situation again.No, it's not called adapters. Wiring up some kind of adapter to allow that UPS to utilize a standard household power outlet could be trouble.
There's a real, non-arbitrary reason the engineers specified that particular plug not the normal one when they designed that UPS. They built the unit to pull more current than can safely be provided by the 15 A power outlets used in most homes. Trying to use it in such a manner could, at the least, cause a number of circuit breaker trips, and would easily be a fire hazard.