I realized it was hardware problem in my
third post, I know it's hardware now, just what?
I can only plug the serial cable in one PC at a time, so to make my life easier, I chose the windows machine. But if the power goes off I just remotely shut down the server from upstairs anyway. I have the windows machine set to shut down the ups after 5 minutes, even though it can go on for 28, since from doing some reasearch even the highest quality deep cycle batteries should not be left discharged to more th en 50% capacity, so just to make it last longer I have it set to shut off after 5 minutes.
I will test the total wattage consumption used by the win2k machine the server and as well as the router, but I can't see it surpassing 300watts since my monitor upstairs is about 200 watts and I have the PC and the monitor on the UPS and it takes it fine, and it's only a 350va so I assume it's like 200-250 watts. But I want to test wattage for myself since maybe it is overload, but still, why would it reboot? It would just overheat or not work. I overloaded my small ups before and that's basically what happened, the equipment was not functioning right and it was making it beep so I unplugged something and it was fine.
But I did try to unplug the windows machine but same thing. But like Imentioned earlyer it's intermittent, and it seems to do it more when both machines are at full load (server running F@H and windows running UD)
If worse comes to worse I'll keep the windows machine unplugged from the ups and I might even see if I can figure out how to get linux to work with the serial cable. But autoshutdown is not my priority, my priority is to have about 5 minutes of stable operation so I can manually shut down. But this would happen maybe once a year, the rest of "outages" are flickers that are so fast some clocks don't even reset. These are rare too. I have to say our power company is pretty reliable, but it's never bad to be safe anyway.
I just thought of something right now, unlike a power outage, when I unplug the UPS it is no longer grounded because the grounding pin is unplugged too... so could that be the problem?
I have some stuff to do but after I'll go test the total wattage usage, and also contact Belkin tech support if they have a 1-800 number. I think it's the relay switch that's just toast and I'll have to rma it.
Archived topic from Anythingforums, old topic ID:486, old post ID:4309