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Reddit mentions of CyberPower OR700LCDRM1U Smart App LCD UPS System, 700VA/400W, 6 Outlets, AVR, 1U Rackmount,Black

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 6

We found 6 Reddit mentions of CyberPower OR700LCDRM1U Smart App LCD UPS System, 700VA/400W, 6 Outlets, AVR, 1U Rackmount,Black. Here are the top ones.

CyberPower OR700LCDRM1U Smart App LCD UPS System, 700VA/400W, 6 Outlets, AVR, 1U Rackmount,Black
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700VA/400W Battery backup uninterruptible power supply (UPS) system – This simulated sine wave UPS with line interactive topology uses Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR) to protect against under-voltages and over-voltages6 NEMA 5 15R outlets: (4) battery backup and surge protected outlets, (2) surge protected outlets, input: Plug type 15A NEMA 5-15P 10 feet cord plug style; StraightMulti-function LCD screen – Provides runtime in minutes, battery status, power conditions, alerting users to potential problems before they can affect critical equipment and cause downtime. Remote management: Requires optional RMCARD205Provides battery backup and surge protection for department servers, work-group servers, workstations, network devices, and telecom installations without active PFC power supplies3 year warranty – Including batteries, Dollar 300,000 connected equipment guarantee, FREE PowerPanel business edition management software (Download). Frequency range:57 – 63 Hertz
Specs:
ColorBlack
Height1.75 Inches
Length9.25 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateAugust 2018
Size700VA
Weight21.7 Pounds
Width17.25 Inches

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Found 6 comments on CyberPower OR700LCDRM1U Smart App LCD UPS System, 700VA/400W, 6 Outlets, AVR, 1U Rackmount,Black:

u/m1stertim · 11 pointsr/livesound

>Has anybody have any experience with this?

Yes

>How does gain compensation fit into the workflow, and how does it work?

  1. Set your gain the normal way during sound checks (either FoH or Mons is in charge of this)
  2. Have a point where you're "done" with setting gain (end of sound checks for us)
  3. Turn GC on for all channels; this keeps both boards from accidentally stepping on the other person's gain
  4. Switch the gain controls on your board to digital gain

    >Lastly, is there a way to make this redundant with out the use of switches?

    Nope. But I'd rank redundant power supplies on the consoles and everything on UPSes higher on my priority list than redundant data cabling, if that matters to you.

    We use redundant Cisco SG300-10 switches and CyberPower OR700 UPSes. Both have worked really really well for us in the last year.

    >I am hoping to be able to daisy chain the consoles and stage boxes in a loop. Does this work?

    Yes, that works. You don't complete the loop though; Dante does not support redundancy via ring topology, only star topology.
u/MikeSD34 · 2 pointsr/homelab

I have the OR700LCDRM1U and I'm really happy with it. It is louder when on battery than my tower units though, and I'd be curious if that's unique to mine or if I should look to replace as I haven't heard that complaint from anyone else.

My only real complaints are that the run time isn't great, exactly as advertised and what I expected, but it'd be nice if there was a 2U shallow depth model available.

Has been solid as a rock for me though.

u/zanfar · 1 pointr/cableadvice

> but I don't know if they sell one with 4 ports.

You can get up to 6 keystone jacks in a 1-gang box

> I thought that I would buy a new rack-mountable switch and patch panel. This is what I've been considering:

Like /u/toaster_knight said, get a vertical or deeper one. I would strongly recommend an actual enclosure with a locking door for an office environment.

I also see no reason to put anything smaller than a 24-port in a rack. It's just a waste of space and money.

I would also recommend at least a SMB-level switch. Yes, they are more expensive, but their uptime and management capabilities are worth it IMO. The Ubiquiti 24-port switch is under $200 IIRC.

> I'm assuming that I can rest the router on top of the switch.

That will probably be fine, but you can get rackmount shelves and drawers as well. The shelf is nice because you can remove the switch without messing about with the router.

> I'd also like to buy some type of cable organizers for inside the ceiling. I normally use those small cable clips, but they seem to be intended for one cable. I've seen velcro used, but I'm not sure how to actually secure the cables.

You can get joist hangers, but inside a ceiling, the cables are usually just bundled and left loose or in a tray. If you have a drop ceiling, there are a wide variety of products designed for your support system.

I would also recommend a UPS and a power distribution panel. UPS for obvious reasons and the power panel will let you easily power cycle each component without having to dig into the back--something that gets much harder after rack-mounting.

u/eponerine · 1 pointr/sysadmin

I have a few PoE switches on a small wall-mount rack and I use a few of these (depending on load and longevity of backup time): http://www.amazon.com/CyberPower-OR700LCDRM1U-Smart-700VA-Rackmount/dp/B000XJLLKG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1453317342&sr=8-1&keywords=1u+UPS

They have an HTTP card if you want to manage remotely (pretty handy for remote power cycles, etc)

u/finish06 · 1 pointr/homelab

I currently have a CyberPower UPS, i.e. http://www.amazon.com/CyberPower-OR700LCDRM1U-Smart-700VA-Rackmount/dp/B000XJLLKG/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1418059449&sr=8-2&keywords=rack+mount+ups... and I have connected it to a VM via UPS (A & B ends) and it tells me the wattage used to run based upon what is connected. This is much more cheap compared to smartonline series from Tripplite. The limitation is it isn't accessable via SNMP for that requires a network card add-on... :(