UPS for emergency lighting

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don_resqcapt19

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Illinois
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retired electrician
If I want to use a remote UPS to provide power to lights that will be the required emergency lighting, does the UPS have to be listed to UL 924 or can a standard UPS be used?
 
Every inverter for egress lighting I have seen installed has been an emergency inverter.

I doubt our inspectors would approve a run of the mill inverter.
 
I don't even know a UPS that isn't built for UL924 compatibility that would give you 90 minutes of backup power.
 
...
It would be tough for a traditional UPS to come along with 90 minutes of battery and not run into battery failures.
I have a few installed for PLCs and DCS equipment that have run time exceeding 90 minutes. They have additional battery cabinets to get the extended run time.
 
I have a few installed for PLCs and DCS equipment that have run time exceeding 90 minutes. They have additional battery cabinets to get the extended run time.
Are the batteries strung together at 12 or 24V OR 120V or something else. When there are more than ~ 2 containers in series (>24V), the UPS batteries with long runtime sometimes don't charge evenly and fail early. If you've had better luck, that's something to remember.
 
Are the batteries strung together at 12 or 24V OR 120V or something else. When there are more than ~ 2 containers in series (>24V), the UPS batteries with long runtime sometimes don't charge evenly and fail early. If you've had better luck, that's something to remember.
The older ones were 120 volt strings, the most recent ones had 480 volt strings. Not sure about early failure, but they normally replace the batteries on a 3 or 4 year cycle.
 
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