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Your cart is empty.A mini-tower UPS with line interactive topology, the CyberPower Intelligent LCD CP1500AVRLCD provides battery backup (using simulated sine wave output) and surge protection for desktop computers, workstations, networking devices, and home entertainment systems. The CP1500AVRLCD uses Automatic Voltage Regulation (AVR) to correct minor power fluctuations without switching to battery power, which extends battery life. AVR is essential in areas where power fluctuations occur frequently. The CP1500AVRLCD comes with a three-year warranty (including coverage of batteries) and a $500,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee.
Jorge
Reviewed in Mexico on June 1, 2025
No me ha decepcionado. Tengo una pantalla de 55 pulgadas y me dura la batería alrededor de 30 min continuos.
Barneychu
Reviewed in Mexico on May 30, 2025
Recomendado.Estoy en una ubicación donde las variaciones de luz son constantes, tengo varios equipos conectados y otros componentes (2 PCs, NAS, y router) y sin problemas.Nota: La salida es de onda "escalonada", no es una señal sinusoidal suave, y algunos PSUs no soportan este tipo de salida.En mi experiencia, funciona muy bien con las fuentes MSI y Corsair, pero da problemas con fuentes Cooler Master.
Doug
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2025
Very satisfied, thanks allot.
Diego
Reviewed in Mexico on May 14, 2025
Estás trabajando o haciendo una cosa X y se te va la luz, con esto no.No solo proteges tus dispositivos, sino que tienes tiempo más que de sobra para cerrar lo que sea que estés haciendo y apagar de forma segura tu equipo.Tengo mi módem conectado a esto y puede durar horas en las que tengo internet en el celular cuando se va la luz.Lo único que no me gusta es que hace como un pitido cuando se pone en marcha la batería que es bastante ruidoso y que personalmente me costó apagar.
Raymond
Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2025
Bought this almost 3 years ago and works perfectly fine until one day the UPS started to randomly mute/unmute itself frequently which causes it to create a beep-beep sound when muting and a beep sound when unmuting. I figured it is the front LCD circuit board that had an issue. Since I was still under warranty I contacted Cyberpower and they were able to send me a replacement front panel to replace it. Now the issue is resolved
Ed - BC, Canada
Reviewed in Canada on August 2, 2023
This 1500 watt battery backup UPS delivers. I wish to share my experience with it for those of you who may decide to integrate one of these into your home.First, I bought the unit with the intention of putting it into my wall, literally. So, warranty is void obviously and I did have to buy additional components to do this job. The goal for me was to provide and protect my network connection and lighting during a power outage. The Cyberpower 1500 watt UPS provides a sufficient amount of run time should we have a power black out and its surge protection safeguards the network equipment connected to it.I considered that the general space between wall studs gives me about 14.5 inches, but where this was going I only had 10.5 and 2x4 studs are 3.5” wide so the casing for the UPS had to go. I protected the circuit board and transformer of the UPS in smaller project boxes, and after replacing the battery wires with longer ones and lengthening the wires to the transformer, the unit was almost ready to install into my wall. It was powered by the kitchen light switch (replaced by a tamper proof switch that needs a key to turn on or off, so it is always on and cannot be accidentally shut off). The UPS provides power to the wifi kitchen LED lights which are un turn operated through a voice assistant. The voice assistant also is powered by the UPS and the wifi booster is also powered by it as well.The front panel of the UPS case I kept intact and mounted to a piece of black acrylic plastic I had left over from a similar project. This “panel” was mounted over the cut out I put in the wall and another wood cover was placed over the battery area I cut out lower from the panel. The whole project took a few days to prepare and then a few hours to install into the existing wiring of the house. Now, the UPS is inside of the wall, and function perfectly.The series of photos show the unit disassembled, then I checked to see how it fit into the project boxes. After that it was just mounting, soldering, wiring, and then modifying the house wall and wiring, to place the unit before the kitchen lights, but after the switch power. The one with the wood panel and vent is a cover for the battery compartment. Last are a couple of finishing photos, one showing the lights with 100% brightness, the other at 25% brightness. The estimated run time is on the Cyberpower display and the load image above is blank because the LED lights draw almost nothing for power when running.Our home’s kitchen lights are now able to run for as much as 460 minutes at 25% brightness, or as much as 160 minutes at full brightness. The goal was achieved and I am very pleased with the Cyberpower UPS as it does exactly what we need it to.The unit had the ability to surge protect your cable, and RJ-45 (Ethernet) connections, but I removed these as they were not needed. I hope that whether you use it as is or you modify it yourself, you enjoy the protection it offerers for many years to come.
eieiya
Reviewed in Japan on October 25, 2020
初期不良があり、返品させていただきました。やはり並行輸入品は、不安がありますね
M. Butkus
Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2010
ONE: After much researching... you can't plug one UPS into another UPS to extend power. You can damage both.You can get two, one for the PC, one for the monitor.TWO: The newer UPS models check your 120V wiring. If this unit finds a wiring fault (little light on the back) the UPS WILL NOT BE RECOGNIZED by your PC. Nothing much about this is stated on their web site nor manual ! ! Trying to install the software will shut your PC down as the software shuts down if it can't find the UPS. Yes, for a few seconds there is a cancel screen !So I buy this unit for my Vista Business 32bit PC. It says it's Vista 64bit and Win7 compliant, not many are and everyone is moving to the faster 64 bit Win 7. I would first download the newer PowerPanel version.As stated above this and other newer UPS models, will check and NOT WORK with bad wiring (reverse hot, no ground). So if you are getting a newer model UPS get a wall mount outlet checker for $4 at your local discount store. They plug into whatever wall outlet/extension cord you are going to use for the UPS. They have three lights, two amber and red. If just the two amber light up... no problem. I had a bad extension cord and the UPS started but would not be recognized after loading the software, then it would shut down the PC. I found the "fault light" on the back and switched the extension cord. That fixed the fault light but the UPS would still not be recognized. Reinstall, upgrade to the newer version PowerPanel, nothing would keep the software from shutting down the PC except the "cancel" on the shutdown reminder.I find, by accident, that if the UPS finds a "fault" the UPS will stay in "fault" until the UPS is shutdown. I just changed my bad ext. cord and never turned it off the PC1500. Once everything was turned off and restarted the driver was loaded, UPS found and I wrote to the company to suggest they put this on their FAQ.First: Check the "fault wiring" light. Second: if it went into fault, you must shut down the UPS and fix the problem.Doesn't everyone have their PC right next to a wall outlet ! ! If you are going to try this with a two wire ext. cord , or broke off the ground tip to fit it in your two wire wall outlet(no ground), or you filed the cord end to make it fit the plug (reverse ground), this unit will power up.. just not be recognized by the software. Even the web site is not accurate for all models as the "fault light" on this model will either be on (bad) or off. The web site says it should blink on/off, but not with this model. Wouldn't that O.K. blinking light waste power? Oh, and by the way, the nice demo image shows a "blue LCD screen". That only stays on for 15 seconds or so. It goes off as an energy saver (.0001 watt ?) and to "save the LCD from burnout". So to see what's on the UPS LCD, you must press the button below the LCD. It does have 5 different screens with lots of tech info about the outlet power and stuff. Gee, everyone puts a UPS were you can easily reach it. None of these LCD items are on the PowerPanel pop-up screen. So buy a short stick too !UPDATE 2012 - Hurricane SandyFor whatever reason, when this was plugged in to my PC and the power went off due to the storm, it fried my power supply ! When the power went out then came back on for 3 seconds I heard a pop and sizzle. I then smelled burnt plastic. I did not know were it came from. A week later (thanks JCPL), when power was restored I turned on the UPS, then the PC.. pop and sizzle my power supply went. This was plugged into the UPS battery part... maybe the power supply was going.. I swapped out the PS that day power was restored and everything worked. I was able to get a replacement power supply via that companies warranty. The UPS has not blinked those next 5 months.... ? ? ?
CO DayTripper
Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2008
I work as a network technician and have used APC equipment for many years. Their high-end units have always done well for us. For many years, I also used their Smart-UPS brand for my home network needs. As they've become old and had problems, it became more economical to replace them, instead of fixing them, especially, since for my desktops, the industry was moving to USB for signaling, and away from serial ports. My rack still has older 1400 VA SU units using SNMP management cards, but I needed a new desktop solution.For the past three years, I stuck to APC's consumer products and have been very disappointed. They have more problems than the older units I've grown to love, and because they change models so often, it's harder to find a battery replacement. Plus, they just have a sort of cheapness about them.With my latest computer purchase, a dual quad Mac Pro, my older 800VA APC just couldn't handle it. So, I decided to try this Cyberpower 1500 and have been very pleased with it, using it for about 2 months so far. The signaling and reported time is more reliable than the APC I was using. Although it should be said, any consumer UPS will not guarantee exact runtimes, load measurements, etc. - For what you are paying for this amount of capacity, some sacrifice must be realized. If you do your calculations correctly, and use it as needed (surges, brown-outs and limited black-outs), these units will fulfill your needs. If you need super accurate measurements and reliable AC power generation, then you should consider a high end unit, such as what APC offers for data centers.The load reading for this unit, when measured with a Kill-A-Watt is pretty accurate. I like the soft blue lighting with auto-off. I connect my two, 24" LCDs to the APC 800VA unit, and the Cyberpower handles the Mac Pro with three, external FireWire drives with no problems. Testing it, by turning off the circuit breaker (shouldn't pull the cord from the wall), reports about 20 minutes of runtime, which seems about right. I've left it on battery power for about 10 minutes, and the readings remained fairly constant. I live out in the country at the end of our power grid, so I get a lot of "dirty" power. Brown-outs are common, and my larger UPS units have the ability to generate statistical logs each day of the power fluctuation. I feel pretty safe with this unit, and wouldn't hesitate to purchase another one.Lastly, the software both Cyberpower and APC provides for the Mac OS, is really bad! I prefer to just use the Mac's SysPrefs to configure the UPS settings and leave it at that. Both companies desperately need a re-write of their OS X software.
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