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5 Things You Should Never Plug Into a UPS

  • sales41613
  • 4 minutes ago
  • 2 min read

A UPS protects your critical equipment, but only when used correctly. Here are five things that don't belong on one.


1. Laser Printers

Laser printers draw a massive power spike every time the fuser activates, often 3 to 10 times their rated wattage. That's enough to trigger an overload, drain the battery, or trip the internal breaker.


Bottom line: Plug your laser printer into a wall outlet or surge protector. If the power goes out mid-print, no data is lost. Your servers and workstations are what need protecting.


2. Space Heaters and High-Wattage Appliances

Heaters, coffeemakers, mini-fridges, and similar devices draw far more continuous power than a UPS is built to handle. They can cause the unit to overheat, trigger alarms, or permanently damage internal components.


Bottom line: If it generates heat or has a motor, it doesn't belong on a UPS. Reserve those outlets for IT equipment and network gear.


3. Another UPS (Daisy Chaining)

Connecting one UPS to the output of another seems like a way to extend runtime, but it actually increases failure risk for both units and can cause the upstream UPS to cycle constantly between battery and normal operation.


Bottom line: If you need more runtime, look for a model that supports extended battery modules. If you need redundancy, use isolated dual UPS systems, not daisy chains. If you need more outlets, consider adding a PDU to your set up.


4. A Surge Protector

A quality UPS already has surge protection built in. Stacking a surge protector on top of it can cause the two devices to interfere with each other and reduce protection quality.


Bottom line: If you need more outlets, use a basic power strip with no surge protection and stay within your UPS's rated watt capacity.


5. More Equipment Than the UPS Can Handle

Every UPS has a rated watt capacity. Exceed it and the UPS will alarm, switch to bypass, or shut down, leaving your equipment completely unprotected.


Bottom line: Add up the wattage of everything connected to your UPS and stay at 80% of the rated capacity or below. Note that VA ratings can be misleading, always check the watt rating as that's the true power capacity of the UPS.


Not Sure If Your Setup Is Right?

If your facility's UPS configuration has grown over the years without a formal review, it's worth having a technician take a look. ORE Power can assess your connected load and make sure you're protected the right way.


📞 24/7 Emergency Line: 888-709-2338 📧 Non-urgent: Request a quote online


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