The Meanwell SDR-480P-24 and -48 do current sharing so you can stack up to 8 of 
those in parallel to have a lot of capacity and N+1 redundancy without the 
DR-RDN20 redundancy module.

We're getting ready to do a four unit N+1 at a site that has 16-17 Amps already 
and is getting some LTE base stations added to it.

________________________________
From: Af <af-boun...@afmug.com> on behalf of George Skorup 
<george.sko...@cbcast.com>
Sent: Saturday, May 20, 2017 4:55:25 PM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] 24V Battery Revert and Charge Module

List price on the BCMU360 is about $215 IIRC. I think we pay about $175 from 
PSUI. Plus $15 for the temp probe.

Are you asking run time? I have a couple with 40Ah of battery attached. A few 
with about 90W load have ran for over four hours, but they never went down, 
utility came back. A couple others with ~190-220W. Lost utility at one of the 
sites the other day. It was running for about an hour and a half before I 
brought a portable gen out. That site didn't go down either. Couldn't let it, 
too much traffic. And of course utility came back 15 minutes after I got the 
generator going.

On 5/20/2017 4:51 PM, Gino A. Villarini wrote:
How much are you paying for the Traco and how long does it last?

On 5/20/17, 4:44 PM, "Af on behalf of George Skorup" 
<af-boun...@afmug.com<mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com>

�

Gino A. Villarini


President
Metro Office Park #18 Suite 304 Guaynabo, Puerto Rico 00968

[cid:part1.95843274.3D23CEA5@cbcast.com]

on behalf of george.sko...@cbcast.com<mailto:george.sko...@cbcast.com>> wrote:

>Mean Well AD-155B
>or
>Mean Well SDR-240-24 + DR-UPS40
>or
>Mean Well SDR-240-24 (or 48) + Traco BCMU360 (jumper selectable for 24
>or 48) - I use this combo most often. The BCMU360 is only good for ~240W
>continuous.
>
>All this stuff is fine until you start looking to deploy things that are
>power hungry like 450m's @ 70W, LTE eNB's that pull 60-100W each,
>multiple AF24s or licensed radios, etc. Then you need big-boy
>rectifiers, which aren't all that expensive, but they aren't cheap
>either. Add good telco-grade batteries on top and it's easily 10x the
>cost of what we're used to with the smaller stuff.
>
>On 5/20/2017 1:16 PM, Matt wrote:
>> What is everyone using for switching from AC to battery backup at sites?
>>
>> I normally have our other guy take care of that part.� But we normally
>> have a DIN mount 24V power supply, a DIN mount packetflux site monitor
>> that monitors power supply output and battery voltage and some DIN
>> mount module that does charging and switching between the two.� Also
>> have a 24V to 48V converter to power our 450i etc stuff.
>>
>> Monitor the site monitor with SNMP and start emailing alarms if power
>> supply voltage drops.� Also graph power supply and battery voltage
>> with MRTG.
>>
>> Curious what others are using here?
>


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