On 08:09, Fri 26 Sep 14, Charles Lepple wrote: > Well, I ended up linking to the latest version of those files, so this shows > the change better: > > https://github.com/networkupstools/nut/commit/f61edb5161de97944074867832edc014323340b1 > > Still a magic constant, but now it has the nominal voltage factored in. Just building your latest code now. Which commit is this in (just to check I have it?) > > > I can change it back to 230V - I was going off of the x2 factor you > mentioned. Either way works for me. OK lets just make sure we are answering the right question. The general/specified UK/European voltage is 230V but the UPS is generating 240v. What is input.nominal.voltage meant to mean in the context of what the UPS (and upsc) reports?
My guess its what it would expect to see so you can relate input.voltage to it. In that respect its 230V for the territory the model is sold into even though Tripp lite are selling it as a 240V model. Either way the differentiation only has to deal with 2x0V versus 110V and so unlikely to be the source of any confusion. Dave _______________________________________________ Nut-upsuser mailing list Nut-upsuser@lists.alioth.debian.org http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nut-upsuser