Each has a RJ45 connection and a cable which has a DB9 on the other end so I would assume serial. I have a serial analyzer of sorts which have LEDs indicating read/write etc, however, I see no change in any lines when cut input power on the UPS. I suspect the connections are serial but
On 11/5/06, Mark Buechler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Each has a RJ45 connection and a cable which has a DB9 on the other end so I
would assume serial.
Probably serial, then.
I have a serial analyzer of sorts which have LEDs
indicating read/write etc, however, I see no change in any lines when
On 11/5/06, Mark Buechler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't believe it did light up but I'll check again.
It's possible that it has only been wired to blink when bits are sent
to the PC, which might not happen until you send a valid command to
the UPS.
Is it possible to learn more with
On 11/4/06, Charles Lepple [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Saw your other thread discussing HAL - is your current setup using NUT
to determine when to shut down, or is NUT just telling another
subsystem when the UPS is on battery power (which might just use a
timer, instead of waiting for a low battery
I don't believe it did light up but I'll check again.Is it possible to learn more with minicom or some other terminal app?- Mark.On 11/5/06,
Charles Lepple [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 11/5/06, Mark Buechler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Each has a RJ45 connection and a cable which has a DB9 on the
Hi,
this Ellipse range dumbness is known and I've already talked about that.
These models don't store their battery charge at shutoff time, and so
they restore the arbitrary 85 % value which is totally wrong.
2006/11/5, Pedro Côrte-Real [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On 11/4/06, Charles Lepple [EMAIL
On Monday 06 November 2006 07:05, Arnaud Quette wrote:
expecting a little more. I'll try lowering battery.charge.low to 20
and see if that helps.
right, lowering battery.charge.low will help getting a bit more
runtime, but remember to keep enough time for the system shutdown.
Also, the
7 matches
Mail list logo