Greetings all; I pulled a Belkin F6C100-4 into the shop this afternoon, deader than a door nail. Out of service for about a year because (I'm assuming here) that the cooling fan stopped and cooked what little remaining life there may have been out of the batteries, which had swelled so badly I had to split its frame to get them out. They are also in the under 1 volt per 12 volt pack charge state, which considering they are about 5 years old & it hasn't been plugged in for 18 months because it had failed & would not restart. Looking over the circuitry, and playing Sherlock with the clues since I am a C.E.T., it appears that there is a relay in series with the line voltage input, which is driven by that section of the PCB that is connected only to the battery, and that without the batteries to supply 'starter' power, it will not enable the relay to power itself up. Am I correct? I took a chance and ordered some fresh batteries, but they probably will not arrive before 2010 now. I'll also need to locate a new fan, as that one can be turned by hand or air, but is certainly much too stiff to run under its assumed 12 volt dc supply. No damaged parts can be seen on any of the PCB's. I am also disappointed to find the fan doesn't have a tach wire in its hookup that Belkin _could_ have used to trigger a power down when it failed, but obviously did not. For a $375 (new in 2001 or 2) ) ups, I really expected more. OTOH, those batteries I took out are the 3rd replacements (from Belkin at $225 a kit) I have put in it. What I ordered were $87 with shipping. I buy a lottery ticket about once a year too. ;-) Can nut be trained to listen to this old boat (it weighs in at about 45 pounds) anchor? Serial only of course. -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel
Charles Lepple
2009-Dec-28 00:25 UTC
[Nut-upsuser] diff question, Belkin F6C100-4 this time
On Dec 27, 2009, at 7:02 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:> Greetings all; > > I pulled a Belkin F6C100-4 into the shop this afternoonReferring to http://www.networkupstools.org/stable-hcl.html , there is a chance that one of these two drivers will talk to it: * http://new.networkupstools.org/man/belkin.html * http://new.networkupstools.org/man/belkinunv.html I don't know enough about the model numbers to say whether yours might be an old -UNV series or not. (Some messages that I found with Google seem to indicate that -UNV models have a USB port as well as serial, so it might be completely different.)> Looking over the circuitry, and playing Sherlock with the clues > since I am a > C.E.T., it appears that there is a relay in series with the line > voltage > input, which is driven by that section of the PCB that is connected > only to > the battery, and that without the batteries to supply 'starter' > power, it > will not enable the relay to power itself up.The belkinunv man page talks about a related issue: http://new.networkupstools.org/man/belkinunv.html#_soft_shutdown_workaround (first paragraph) It sounds like that model won't come back on if you tell it to shut down before the batteries are completely drained. I guess it depends whether your intended use case includes reliably starting back up after a power outage, or if you are more concerned with shutting down cleanly.