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CyberPower CP1500PFCRM2U PFC Sinewave UPS Battery Backup and Surge Protector, 1500VA/1000W, 8 Outlets, AVR, Short Depth 2U Rackmount; UL Certified

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Original price was: $399.95.Current price is: $36.99.

Original price was: $399.95.Current price is: $36.99.

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The CP1500PFCRM2U is a PFC Sinewave rackmount UPS that provides battery backup (using sine wave output), surge protection, and EMI/RFI filtration for security systems, audio/visual equipment, and networking equipment requiring active PFC power source compatibility. The CP1500PFCRM2U features Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR), which corrects minor power fluctuations without switching to battery power, and a multifunction control panel with a color LCD to quickly confirm status and alerts at-a-glance. Remote management and/or monitoring is available with optional purchase of a Remote Network Management Card or Cloud Monitoring Card. At only 10.5 inches in depth, the CP1500PFCRM2U fits comfortably in short-depth rack installations where space is at a premium.
1500VA/1000W PFC Sine Wave Battery Backup Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) System designed to support active PFC and conventional power supplies; Safeguards security systems, audio/visual equipment, and networking devices
EIGHT NEMA 5-15R OUTLETS: Provide battery backup & surge protection for connected devices; INPUT: NEMA 5-15P right angle, 45 degree offset plug with six foot power cord
MULTIFUNCTION, COLOR LCD PANEL: Displays immediate, detailed information on battery and power conditions; Color display alerts users to potential issues before they can affect critical equipment and cause downtime
SHORT-DEPTH RACKMOUNT: 10.5 inches in depth, the UPS fits comfortably in short-depth rack installations where space is at a premium; AUTOMATIC VOLTAGE REGULATION: Corrects minor power fluctuations without switching to battery power, extending battery life
3-YEAR WARRANTY – INCLUDING THE BATTERY; $500,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee and FREE PowerPanel Management Software (Download)

8 reviews for CyberPower CP1500PFCRM2U PFC Sinewave UPS Battery Backup and Surge Protector, 1500VA/1000W, 8 Outlets, AVR, Short Depth 2U Rackmount; UL Certified

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  1. PB

    CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD 1500VA Pure Sine Wave-Cures MacPro Wake From Sleep Shutdown
    Purchased this CyberPower unit about month ago. Have 2008 MacPro 8 core 3. GHZ fully loaded internally that was running for last couple years along with assorted Monitors-(2), printer etc. Had been using an APC 1500 & APC 1000- splitting various thing around plugged in to either one to share load. A MDD dual processor was in the mix but it was always on the opposite power supply, not both on one APC unit. For the last 3 yrs have been enduring endless stupidity with these APC power supplies. They would shut down randomly & repeatedly EVEN if the MacPro was not the one on that particular power UPS.Although for the most part – the UPS that was on the MacPro would shut down. You could switch a light on in another room- even a 1 bulb 75 watt could essentially trigger one of the 2 APC units to shut down as if they were overloaded. They were not. House is newer & wired correctly with 12 gauge/20 amp romex wire everywhere for any normal 110v outlets & 8 gauge 50 amp for 220v outlets & 200 amp service. The 2 power supplies are on their own line by themselves-nothing else. I am very familiar with house wiring & have rewired several homes I’ve owned. All wiring in house is up to snuff done properly.I tolerated this nonsense with these APC for years. They made absolutely no sense. I was aware at some point & positively as of recent reading that the 2008 MacPro’s had PFC power supplies in them & that they would prefer pure sine wave power- as house current is. Even with that knowledge it still made no senses as to the random-regular weekly shutdown on the APC units with the computer asleep not even trying to wake or even having A TRUE power outage. The batteries checked out ALWAYS and if not hooked up to computer would work fine. If computer was awake & cut power they would hold system for as many minutes long as they were expected to. No problem. Just if asleep- turn light on anywhere in house- units sometimes/randomly cut out. If house current off & wake computers units shut down. Stupid really. Whats the point of the power supply ? (sounds like I am reviewing the APC’s not CyberPower-right ?)Finally my MP had 8Gb of ram out of 16GB go bad. Had it replaced and I said that’s it.I mean really- the APC power supplies were shutting down on a almost weekly basis & there wasn’t even any power failures- the units themselves were THE power failures.Did as much research as possible regarding PFC power supplies & chose the CyberPower PFC 1500 unit. Cost more than the similar NON pure sine wave APC units. But cost quite a bit less than the Pure sine wave APC units. Who knows why APC charges so much for pure sine wave units. But after using their product probably for nearly 15 yrs- I was done.The CyberPower unit is a GREAT unit. Have read various reviews about the power switch(on unit-on/off & menu) etc problem some are having with it-I don’t get the problem. It is a bit of a different technique how the button operates- but I picked it up quickly. The current power draw in numbers of watts as well as load capacity being used on the LCD display is great. You have real-time readout if you chose to, as to those numbers. It’s like having Kill-A-Watt meter always on. You get to see the basic power fluctuations of your components. The unit is very compact- somewhat smaller than the APC 1500/1000 units.Right now connected with MacPro w/4 Hitachi 7200 rpm 64MB cache 3TB drives internal, ATI/Apple 5870 video card- w/3 24″ monitors, epson 3800 printer, external OWC QX2 raid case w-4 hitachi 7200 rpm 32 MB cache 2TB drives & 2008 8 core MacPro booted off of that raid case along with MBP early 2011-17″ plugged in but asleep, DSL modem, Dlink 8 port gigabit ethernet hub, 5th Gen AirPort extreme, MDD G/4 plugged in but off, the CyberPower shows a load of about 564 watts. That draw is confirmed accurate(slightly less actually for CyberPower unit itself not being in mix) if all were disconnected from CyberPower unit and plugged in- instead to the Kill-A=Watt meter. Everything asleep around 54 watts draw.I can switch ANY combination of light/appliance/central a/c /55″ plasma/electric 220v clothes dryer/3.5HP 220v air compressor/ 5500watt electric heater- 500 gallon spa w/dual pumps etc in any combination on or off with computers asleep, awake, getting awake, going to sleep. UPS functions PERFECTLY & as expected- stellar performance. NO random shutdowns-nothing. Cut power to unit while computers asleep-no problem. You know the conclusion here -right?Pro’s* Economical, compact, nice looking* PFC compatible- Pure Sine Wave unit.* Operates flawlessly* Cheaper than APC pure sine wave units* Power consumption/load LCD is very useful if you like that sort of thing-I do* 3yr warranty -same as APCCons* Cost more than NON PFC compatible/Pure Sine Wave units* CyberPower warranty/service- unknown quality yet. APC was/had excellent serviceConclusion.Highly recommended, especially if you have any of the MacPro’s. I imagine some on PC side have units that are PFC and would require pure sine wave to operate a UPS on those computers properly also. I will not ever buy a UPS that is not a pure sine wave unit again.

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  2. Kailou

    Rock solid, good price, good runtime, easy to manage
    CyberPower CP1500PFCLCD PFC SinewaveSo good, I bought 2! UPS systems in this class can easily cost more. I have had poor experience with APC systems in this range, so I gave CyberPower a shot. First one I bought for all my network equipment. I bought the optional network card as well. I have a couple routers attached, several WiFi Mesh base units attached by PoE router, laptop, NAS and a couple other items. I get 1 hour or more of uptime! (YMMV, yada yada) All the items I have attached amount to about 40% load if they are all on at the time.The 2nd UPS I bought about a year later for my home entertainment stuff – TV, stereo and a couple miscellaneous network items. Also gets about 1 hour uptime. No net card on the 2nd one, I wanted to test connecting it to HomeIt via HomeBridge and RPi.I don’t need to manage these UPSs on a regular basis. We live in the mountains and power can be flaky. I wanted to have some way to monitor utility power when I was at work. The NIC adapter is perfect for that. I think it is a little on the $$ side, but has been worth it. Plugs right in and easy to configure. I started out with a 1 year promotional subscription to their service, but don’t really need it. I still get power change notifications even without the subscription. When I get a power out notification I know I have about 1 hour of uptime before I need to turn on the generator. I did get the other CyberPower UPS to hook up pretty easily to my RPi unit running HomeBridge, with NUT UPS plugin. NUT can have a reasonably steep learning curve. I did get it working, but haven’t really had the need to play with it too much since I still have the other UPS with the NIC. FWIW, I already had the RPi unit in place for a bunch of other IoT integrations with HomeKit – I would not go that route just for UPS management! ;PA word about generators:Most UPS systems will not play nicely with your standard portable open frame generator, regardless of how large/stable it is. It’s the shape of the stepped wave that can often fool the UPS causing it to trip on. The only foolproof way around that is to 1) Get an online UPS system at 3-5 times the cost of line-interactive 2) get an inverter generator. Don’t get too fooled by ‘generator’ modes on line-interactive or standby UPS types. Those modes may help, but in my experience it will not work 100% of the time. Initially I had a standard Champion 7kw open frame delivering power to whole house. Performance was rock solid voltage and frequency delivery without fluctuation. These CyberPower systems worked off the generator about 75% of the time, tripping on the rest of the time. I have a couple APC systems with ‘generator’ mode that would have nothing to do with the generator – they would trip instantly even in ‘generator’ mode. Still, this was not stable enough for me. My solution was to get the inverter generator – a 9kw Westinghouse delivering power to the whole house. It was actually cheaper than getting an online UPS equivalent to this CyberPower! Ultimately it wasn’t just the lower cost, but the versatility and stability of delivering super clean pure sine to the whole house. Better for everything inside. Zero issues, of course, with these CyberPwoer UPSs. They just see the generator output as regular utility power.

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  3. andrew

    Keeps the internet router going during power outage
    The cyber battery 1500va, has work great, mainly use it to keep my internet router going during a power outage. It usually can keep the internet router going for around 2 hours maybe more which is great for keeping communication going during a local power outage (only internet router turned on (depending on route power consumption)). The display is great for letting you know how much battery time is left before it cuts off and letting you know the power output. During an outage it can run a TV, internet router, charge phones and flashlights but the more things drawing power the shorter battery time and it will let you know how many minutes are left. I’ve no problem so far, it’s been reliable. “It’s good to have and not need than to need and not have” I heard somebody say this

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  4. Mich Montoya

    Excelente y con sus 600 watts suficiente para lo que lo requiero, sobre todo por la onda senoidal pura, que es un requisito indispensable para mi, es un equipo sobrio y elegante, la pantalla muy útil, proporciona información clave, puede quedarse encendida todo el tiempo, o puede apagarse al minuto, a elección del usuario, lo utilizo con una pantalla LG Oled Evo de 65” C5, un Xbox Series X y un módem con internet de 1Gb, el consumo varía con todo encendido entre 200 y con carga gráfica alta unos 350 watts, por el tipo de onda, no mete ruido a los equipos, es muy silencioso, el tiempo de respaldo con lo que estés trabajando o reproduciendo, marca entre 9 y 19 minutos, tiempo más que suficiente para apagar los equipos de manera correcta y segura, con el puro módem trabajando, la batería proporciona hasta 170 mins de respaldo, vale cada centavo, recomendado.

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  5. &Q9oRV

    Según la pantalla led del artículo, a carga completa sostiene mi ordenador durante 4-6 minutos en una sesión ordinaria de juegos, 18 minutos cuando no hace nada.Ryzen 7 5800x a 70w (De acuerdo con AMD Adrenalin software)Radeon RX 9070 a 165wDos monitores a 30 y 40wRouter WiFi de 10wLa carga es definitivamente un poco elevada para este UPS, pero funciona bien, llevo usándolo una semana y no ha presentado problemas, aún cuando el GPU utiliza 200w que es su rating máximo.La fuente de poder es una Cooler Master MWE V2 650w Gold, cuenta con APFC, por lo que es relevante usar un UPS con onda senoidal no simulada. Como prueba, desconecté el UPS de la pared y el equipo no presentó ningún problema, el cambio a batería fué muy rápido incluso bajo la carga antes mencionada.Buen producto

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  6. William

    The product worked for awhile. It prevented some surges.Unfortunately, the battery is either garbage or it was defective in my case. It died in 1.5 years of normal use.When I did a “self-test” it literally cut the power to everything and printed an error code “E21”.I never used the battery itself, except in one short power outage.

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  7. Kazzita

    Lo compré principalmente para mi computadora(9070XT/ i5-14600K), la misma consume poco más de 500w en carga, por lo que es adecuado. No hace ruido, salvo cuando pasa al modo AVR, lo cual es casi imperceptible a menos que le estés prestando demasiada atención. El software de Cyberpower funciona bastante bien, probé el apagado automático y funcionó sin problemas.En resumen: Buena compra, vale totalmente la pena si tienes pensado usarlo en tu PC o algún equipo igual de sensible, lo agarré en oferta del 10/10, en precio regular está carísimo, si no te urge, espera a las ofertas.

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  8. Arturo

    Un amigo que trabaja en sistemas eléctricos me recomendó conseguirlo, cuesta más que un nobreaker convencional, pero en definitiva valió la pena, ya me ha salvado en al menos 3 ocasiones a mi y a mi computadora

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    CyberPower CP1500PFCRM2U PFC Sinewave UPS Battery Backup and Surge Protector, 1500VA/1000W, 8 Outlets, AVR, Short Depth 2U Rackmount; UL Certified
    CyberPower CP1500PFCRM2U PFC Sinewave UPS Battery Backup and Surge Protector, 1500VA/1000W, 8 Outlets, AVR, Short Depth 2U Rackmount; UL Certified

    Original price was: $399.95.Current price is: $36.99.

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