A UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) is an electrical device that provides instant, short-term backup power when the main power source fails or fluctuates. It protects sensitive equipment from power outages, voltage drops, surges, spikes, and other power-related disturbances.
A UPS typically:
Provides backup power — usually through a battery — so devices continue running during outages.
Regulates voltage to prevent damage from unstable power.
Filters noise and protects from surges coming from the utility grid.
Allows safe shutdown of equipment during longer power failures.
Offline / Standby UPS
Basic protection, switches to battery only during outages.Line-Interactive UPS
Adds automatic voltage regulation (AVR) for better protection.Online Double-Conversion UPS
Highest level of protection; continuously powers devices through the inverter.
Servers, routers, storage systems
Prevents data loss and downtime
Ensures stable power for mission-critical systems
Automation systems, PLCs, CNC machines
Prevents production line interruptions
Protects expensive equipment from surges and outages
Base stations, network equipment
Maintains continuous communication during grid instability
Imaging systems, laboratory analyzers, ICU devices
Ensures patient safety and uninterrupted operation
POS systems, computers, security systems
Prevents transaction loss and electronic damage
PCs, home networking devices, entertainment systems
Keeps the internet and essential electronics running during brief outages
A UPS ensures:
Zero-interruption power for sensitive devices
Protection from power quality issues (surges, sags, spikes, brownouts)
Reduced downtime, data loss, and equipment failure

