Is this correct? And/or am i missing something?
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Solved Comptia A+ core 2 surge/spike/brown/blackout
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This seems to be incorrect
The surge protector will not help with a temporary undervoltage (brownout) or complete loss of power (blackout)
The line conditioner will insure even power and reduce the effects of an undervoltage, temporary and longer overvoltage (surge/spike) but not total power loss (blackout)
Standby UPS can trigger when the voltages is lost but will not provide power conditioning which will pass all power distortions (surges/spikes) to the devices connected to them Also undervoltages might trigger the Stand-by UPS
Stand-by UPSs are less expensive and do not require the massive heat sinks that Online UPSs need, however they can take several milliseconds to switch on.Online UPS will provide line conditioning and are constantly providing even DC power through their batteries which means they protect devices from power distortions (surges/spikes, in-rush, brownouts, blackouts. They are expensive, require cooling do to the excessive heat they generate, but do not have the switching time delays such as Offline UPSs.
I hope this helps @Mario-Tork-0
Best Regards,
Wes BryanKnowledge is a road to be traveled upon, not a destination to be reached~~
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This seems to be incorrect
The surge protector will not help with a temporary undervoltage (brownout) or complete loss of power (blackout)
The line conditioner will insure even power and reduce the effects of an undervoltage, temporary and longer overvoltage (surge/spike) but not total power loss (blackout)
Standby UPS can trigger when the voltages is lost but will not provide power conditioning which will pass all power distortions (surges/spikes) to the devices connected to them Also undervoltages might trigger the Stand-by UPS
Stand-by UPSs are less expensive and do not require the massive heat sinks that Online UPSs need, however they can take several milliseconds to switch on.Online UPS will provide line conditioning and are constantly providing even DC power through their batteries which means they protect devices from power distortions (surges/spikes, in-rush, brownouts, blackouts. They are expensive, require cooling do to the excessive heat they generate, but do not have the switching time delays such as Offline UPSs.
I hope this helps @Mario-Tork-0
Best Regards,
Wes BryanKnowledge is a road to be traveled upon, not a destination to be reached~~
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Thank you for the clarification!