Five published UPS configurations. Click any component to take it out of service and watch what
goes dark.
Educational. Not for field use.
This reproduces worked examples from a published white paper so they can be poked at. It is not
an engineered study, it is not a substitute for the manufacturer's instructions or a qualified
person on site, and it does not tell you your tier. It cannot: a tier is awarded
by the Uptime Institute against a standard this project has not read, and it turns on things a
one line diagram does not show. What this does compute is narrower and checkable: which single
components, if taken out, drop a load.
energized de energized alternate or normally open out of service