abu said:
Thank you all for your suggestions. I understand that it's not that
easy: one big problem problem I see after your comments is that all PSUs
are made differently and I would probably not be able to find a DC
voltage that is ok for all (also some have suggested that active PFC
ones wouldn't work with any DC voltage) and in most cases I cannot
replace the PSUs that are embedded in the servers we have.
I know 48v DC-to-DC PSUs exist, however 1) their cost is high ($130 at
least) 2) I would need a lot of relatively thick wires for the high
amperes due to the low voltage 3) I would need to replace all PSUs in
our servers, and as I said most servers come bundled with a PSU and I
don't think I can replace those 4) more importantly, I seem not able to
find big 24v UPSs around, such as a 15kVA 24v UPS.
It is interesting what Dave has said: square wave or modified sinewave
UPSs should be cheaper (possibly much cheaper?) than sinewave UPSs,
unfortunately I cannot find a >10kVA UPS with modified sine wave or
square wave, all big ones are true sine wave and are very expensive. Or
do you have a link?
I kinda guess that modified sinewave ones are not so much cheaper,
presumably because they still want to keep output voltages very precise,
so there is expensive power electronics for that, after which making the
true sinewave is not much more expensive. In reality I think computers
don't need such precise voltages at their input, I think that a +-2v
precision should be OK for computers. 2v is the voltage of a battery
cell, so that means that a cheap & big UPS should just have a large
array of 2v cells in a cascade and then add or remove a few cells from
the cascade in real time so to keep an output of 310 (340?) +-2 volts.
Then it could use this voltage to do the 3-levels stepped sine wave.
Don't you think?
A 15kVA UPS made like this I think doesn't exist, or does it? (link?)
300 cells (car-like, like 50 car batteries) in a series could produce
360V with cranking amperes (CA, according to car batteries specs that is
about 600 CA each battery maintaining 7.2v per battery so 300x50 =
30,000A at 7.2*50=360V), that is about 220*30000 = 6.6 MVA with little
more than the cost of 50 car batteries (some $4000...)
Wouldn't that work?
I understand there would be some safety issues putting 50 car batteries
together... probably this should be kept in a separate building
Thanks for all your comments