
***An updated after several months of usage, and a change in score to 5 stars as I've learned more about the unit. Buried in the software which is run through your web browser, is a setting to turn down the sensitivity on the incoming voltage which fixes my major con of this unit for me, the unit toggling between ac and battery constantly. *** Very straight forward to setup, the units interface is fairly intuitive to use. Provided me with roughly 30min of power for 2 computers, I7 7700K with a 1080ti, and a I9 10590XE with a 3080, a boat load of SSD drives between them, lots of peripherals and 3 monitors. No blip in the computers performance when switching between battery and ac driven power. Online web interface for real time monitoring of the unit is a nice plus, can send you email reports when issues arise with the unit. Clear instructions to position the unit in it's final resting place before you connect the battery. This style battery shouldn't be moved around once it's connected.

Pure sine, double-converted online output is the best. Enermax specifies real sine wave (not simulated sine) UPS' for their Infiniti and Galaxy PSU's and the SU-series do it well. It's quick switching to battery power when AC is down and the software works. Can accept external batteries for increased runtime. Internal heat sinks are nice - keeps things cool should you happen to use full 800 watt capacity, but most PC's never use that much even at full tilt. I have an o/c'ed E6600 & HD2900XT, 3 HDD's, 2 opticals, etc. and the output LED's haven't gone past 50%.


This UPS replaced an APC Smart UPS 750 RM 2U - also a rackmount unit. The SRT1000RMXLA adds a super-functional display, power-conditioning capabilities in addition to larger battery capacity/improved runtime.


I live in the country and it's real common to loose power. With an APC I never have to worry about loosing data from a fast shut down. I also don't have to worry about loosing computers, monitor, speaker system or even the printer. It's battery backup for four units and a surge protection for 8. It even gives me time to get a battery lamp and flash lights. The most important thing though is that it gives me the security of knowing that when I'm not here it gives the computer time to shut down just like I was doing it my self. I thought it was bells and whistles, but it's really nice to know my battery strength, how long and how many times it's shut down and even for how long. Great Product and as always delivered fast and secure by Newegg.

The cheapest USP with cable internet/TV support


Let me start by saying I no longer own the 1 I use to have. CyberPower CP1200AVR 1200VA 720W 8 Outlets UPS. I bought this model above years ago. I had it for many years without issues other then software that I only tried once on an xp pc and it had to many bugs back then so I uninstalled it and ran the ups without it. The CP1200AVR I owned cost me roughly $160 back then and I had my pc with a 580w psu in it, 2 monitors, and a lamp connected to the battery side of the jacks (power went out everytime we had a bad storm I hated it so I bought this). I never had a problem with this unit when the power decided to cut out in my place at that time. I loved having this thing knowing my pc was safe from damage when power went out. This thing ran the things I mentioned above for around 30-45 min giving me plenty of time to do whatever I needed to and shut the pc down safely. once the pc was shut down I would use it for the lamp till power came back on. I'm desperately working on buying another 1 for my pc I have today. I paid to much and put a lot of time in building my new pc to have the power go out and destroy components on me.


Easy setup Clean looking Easy management

Plenty of capacity to keep our Xserve and network switch online during brief power outages

it works, and it's cheap, 3year warranty, 15+ minutes of backup (on my system)


Great UPS. I have two of these that run a number of different PCs and servers. I have a generator now so they really only have to keep a load for a few minutes before it kicks on, but prior to that, it ran three servers for a solid 20+ minutes (probably would've lasted longer, but that was enough time for me to gracefully shut everything down)


Let me start by saying I have an APC Smart-Ups 750 from 2004 that to this day is STILL running like a champ. I've replaced the batteries about 4 times in that time frame. This model looks, feels, and smells just like the old with a more modern front panel and cloud service port. It feels just as well constructed and in almost every way functions the same. The updated display lets you change certain settings and displays the current load and charge. The SmartConnect network port is a fantastic addition to this device. It connects to the APC SmartConnect cloud service and monitors your UPS at a simple and basic level. If it's online or on battery, estimated runtime, charge, temperature, firmware version, input/output voltage, load, when you should replace the battery, warranty date, and an event log. It will send you an email with the alert level you would like as well. This is REALLY nice feature out of the box without needing to add a management card, which they can get pretty expensive.



It does what it is suppose to do.