I have an APC Back-UPS XS 1400U that I use to keep my home server running 24/7.
It was purchased in 2015, batteries replaced around 2020, everything was fine until around June 2023 when it started randomly switching to battery for a few seconds for no apparent reason once or twice a day.
The UPS is connected to my home server via USB so I can get some readouts. It says "Unacceptable line voltage changes", but it's configured to switch when it's outside the 160-280v range and it gets nowhere near those thresholds, the voltage fluctuates in the 224-234 range.
I connected an oscilloscope to the mains to see if there were transients when the problem occurred but I don't see anything out of the ordinary and the problem has been getting worse, now it switches an average of 50 times a day.
The UPS still works, it can keep the server up for hours if I unplug the power, so the batteries should be good. What's going on?
and it gets nowhere near those thresholds, the voltage fluctuates in the 224-234 range.
I'm assuming you measured hot to neutral, and didn't find any transients.
Did you put your oscilloscope on hot to ground as well? A faulty ground could cause what you are seeing.
Do you have any CFL bulbs anywhere in your house? I once had a dead CFL bulb in a fixture in my basement. Anytime I turned on my basement light, every LED lamp in the house would strobe.
I tested live to ground, live to neutral, both in and out of the UPS, and I couldn't see anything out of the ordinary.
The input signal isn't a clean sine wave but it's not dirty either, I'd say it's sine with some extra harmonics and a little bit of noise. There were no sudden peaks or meaningful variations even while the UPS was switching furiously.
I don't have CFL bulbs, only LEDs. I can't think of anything else that could be causing interference. I'll try contacting the power company as suggested by @[email protected]
Just for shits and grind, how about neutral to ground? They should be bonded together in the breaker box (and nowhere else), but if there is a fault, you might see some significant potential across them.