I've read some that says cheaper UPS will have trouble with APFC PSU, then some again that says modern UPS/PSU should have no trouble with the type of sine wave. I've also read from some that the only ones that care for pure sine waves are motors. There's also some that says there are just some incompatibility with some UPS & PSU brand but there's no specific list to help and such.
In any case, I just bought a new UPS (HIKVISION DS-UPS1000) in the hopes to have some time to shut my PC down when there's a power outage. I live in a place where power outage are still a thing, although only seldomly. But even when electricity is still running just fine in my home, when I'm playing a game (or when I tried to do a high load activity like a benchmark, did this to test the UPS once) the UPS just cuts the power sometime later. It's not immediate, sometimes happens after an hour of gaming. But then it defeats the purpose of the UPS. I had a better time gaming when plugging my PC through the wall since wall outlets won't cut the power to my PC like that, but then it defeats the purpose of the newly bought UPS. I know for a fact it's not overloading since the UPS also had an overload indicator and never once when it cuts power it'd have any indications (whether from LEDs or beeping). Also I only plug a monitor and my PC with this spec:
CPU: i5-9400F
CPU cooler: stock
Motherboard: MSI H310I PRO (bios 7B80v1A)
Ram: Klevv 8x2 GB DDR4 2666
SSD/HDD: Ballista ADV 2280 512GB, Seagate Barracuda 1TB
GPU: RTX 2080
PSU: Seasonic Focus Plus Gold 550w (5yo)
Chassis: Cougar QBX
OS: Win 11
Monitor: Xiaomi A27i
I'm pretty sure this spec won't even reach the rated wattage on the UPS. I've read some things again that say it might be a voltage problem, but it's beyond my limited understanding, which is why I'm seeking for help from people smarter than me. I want to ask, is there anything I can do without spending much more buying a PSW UPS? Like, maybe buy a stabilizer? Just to make sure the UPS won't cut the power to my PC when gaming, when the wall is still running fine. Or did I just waste a good amount of money buying a UPS I can't even use? I'd be pretty sad if that's the case. Maybe I should've consulted here before buying one.
In any case, I just bought a new UPS (HIKVISION DS-UPS1000) in the hopes to have some time to shut my PC down when there's a power outage. I live in a place where power outage are still a thing, although only seldomly. But even when electricity is still running just fine in my home, when I'm playing a game (or when I tried to do a high load activity like a benchmark, did this to test the UPS once) the UPS just cuts the power sometime later. It's not immediate, sometimes happens after an hour of gaming. But then it defeats the purpose of the UPS. I had a better time gaming when plugging my PC through the wall since wall outlets won't cut the power to my PC like that, but then it defeats the purpose of the newly bought UPS. I know for a fact it's not overloading since the UPS also had an overload indicator and never once when it cuts power it'd have any indications (whether from LEDs or beeping). Also I only plug a monitor and my PC with this spec:
CPU: i5-9400F
CPU cooler: stock
Motherboard: MSI H310I PRO (bios 7B80v1A)
Ram: Klevv 8x2 GB DDR4 2666
SSD/HDD: Ballista ADV 2280 512GB, Seagate Barracuda 1TB
GPU: RTX 2080
PSU: Seasonic Focus Plus Gold 550w (5yo)
Chassis: Cougar QBX
OS: Win 11
Monitor: Xiaomi A27i
I'm pretty sure this spec won't even reach the rated wattage on the UPS. I've read some things again that say it might be a voltage problem, but it's beyond my limited understanding, which is why I'm seeking for help from people smarter than me. I want to ask, is there anything I can do without spending much more buying a PSW UPS? Like, maybe buy a stabilizer? Just to make sure the UPS won't cut the power to my PC when gaming, when the wall is still running fine. Or did I just waste a good amount of money buying a UPS I can't even use? I'd be pretty sad if that's the case. Maybe I should've consulted here before buying one.