I have a CyberPower CP1200AVR UPS that I bought in 2005. I can count on one had the number of times the power has gone out since I've had it. I usually wait about 5 minutes and shut down if the power hasn't come back on, otherwise I shut it down immediately if I know the power won't be back on for a while.
It has been months since there has been a power outage, so the thing hasn't switched over to battery in a while. Friday when I went to turn the computer on, it didn't come on. The UPS was shut down, even though the power button was pushed in. I recycled the power switch, and it seemed fine. Then on Sunday, I was using the computer and the UPS shut off. There was no power spike or brownout. There another UPS on another computer, and it didn't switch to battery or beep or anything.
I reset the power switch, turned the computer back on, but before it even fished the POST, the UPS shut off again. I turn the UPS back on, left everything off, and after 30 seconds or so, it just shuts off.
I had to find a power strip to plug my stuff into since the UPS is dead. I didn't have the UPS software installed, so I downloaded and installed it. I connected it to the computer, ran the software and it shows the UPS in a charging state with 0% battery remaining, yet the UPS isn't humming like it does when it's charging. If I unplug the UPS, it just shuts off, so the batteries have just died.
What could cause the batteries to suddenly die like that? Before this UPS, I had an old APC Back-UPS 450 that I've had since 1998 or so, which still sort of worked when I got this one. I barely had time to shut down before it would run its battery down, but at least it was dieing slowly, not a sudden death like the CyberPower UPS.
I can get replacement batteries for $20 each, it takes 2, so that's $40, which is still cheaper than a new UPS, but I'm worried that something might be wrong with the charging circuit that allowed the batteries to drain down. I'd hate to spend $40 on batteries and find out something else is wrong. Is there any way to make sure that it's just the batteries first?
It has been months since there has been a power outage, so the thing hasn't switched over to battery in a while. Friday when I went to turn the computer on, it didn't come on. The UPS was shut down, even though the power button was pushed in. I recycled the power switch, and it seemed fine. Then on Sunday, I was using the computer and the UPS shut off. There was no power spike or brownout. There another UPS on another computer, and it didn't switch to battery or beep or anything.
I reset the power switch, turned the computer back on, but before it even fished the POST, the UPS shut off again. I turn the UPS back on, left everything off, and after 30 seconds or so, it just shuts off.
I had to find a power strip to plug my stuff into since the UPS is dead. I didn't have the UPS software installed, so I downloaded and installed it. I connected it to the computer, ran the software and it shows the UPS in a charging state with 0% battery remaining, yet the UPS isn't humming like it does when it's charging. If I unplug the UPS, it just shuts off, so the batteries have just died.
What could cause the batteries to suddenly die like that? Before this UPS, I had an old APC Back-UPS 450 that I've had since 1998 or so, which still sort of worked when I got this one. I barely had time to shut down before it would run its battery down, but at least it was dieing slowly, not a sudden death like the CyberPower UPS.
I can get replacement batteries for $20 each, it takes 2, so that's $40, which is still cheaper than a new UPS, but I'm worried that something might be wrong with the charging circuit that allowed the batteries to drain down. I'd hate to spend $40 on batteries and find out something else is wrong. Is there any way to make sure that it's just the batteries first?