CigarStone
For once, knowledge is making me poor!
I have a hunting camp and I heat it with a free standing propane furnace which works great except for one thing. It has an electronic thermostat and if I experience a momentary power glitch it shuts off and has to be lit again by simply pushing a button. This is typically not a problem because I don't heat the cabin in cold weather except when I use it.
The winterizing process and subsequent reopening is a bit of a process and this winter I am doing a consulting project which is much closer to the cabin than home so I am staying there and therefore not winterizing.
Here's the issue:
If I leave the furnace on at a low temp just to keep pipes from freezing, I run the risk of a momentary power glitch shutting off my furnace and nobody would know (if it's a sustained power outage a neighbor will go in and light the furnace for me). These momentary glitches are quite common.
So.......I need a UPS that would get me through a short duration of power outage (milliseconds to a few minutes). It is a 30,000BTU programmable unit with a blower motor which is the issue, the blower motor will draw big current at start up and if this happened coincidentally with a power outage it would kill a small UPS.
Any suggestions?
The winterizing process and subsequent reopening is a bit of a process and this winter I am doing a consulting project which is much closer to the cabin than home so I am staying there and therefore not winterizing.
Here's the issue:
If I leave the furnace on at a low temp just to keep pipes from freezing, I run the risk of a momentary power glitch shutting off my furnace and nobody would know (if it's a sustained power outage a neighbor will go in and light the furnace for me). These momentary glitches are quite common.
So.......I need a UPS that would get me through a short duration of power outage (milliseconds to a few minutes). It is a 30,000BTU programmable unit with a blower motor which is the issue, the blower motor will draw big current at start up and if this happened coincidentally with a power outage it would kill a small UPS.
Any suggestions?