I want to know about real-life pitfalls of attaching oversized batteries to a UPS. I'm looking for somebody who tried it at least once, and has real-world input as to the expected result. I can come up with all sorts of theoretical reasons why it MIGHT be a good or bad idea.
Please bear with me. I chose this section because it's hardware, and a serious inquiry. A Gentoo box is hooked up to this thing, and the serial cable is connected to shut the system down, that's as close as it gets to Gentoo.
So I have a Tripp-Lite Smart 1500 LCDT UPS. The UPS was bought for the devices attached to it, meaning they were all new at the same time. It's a SOHO-grade UPS with an LCD readout and some sort of low-function computer in it to manage things. It uses 2x 7Ah sealed lead-acid gel cells, nothing odd compared to other UPSs of similar size.
I just got a power outage and found out that the batteries give me about 2 seconds of backup power. I still want the systems hooked to it to run, and I want them on a UPS. But it's not production systems, and it's not mission critical. It's all old hardware, so I don't want to buy a new UPS. For professional installations my hardware is retired before this point.
Shopping around, I see that the gel cells for the thing cost not that much less than an automotive sized deep cycle battery, so as I have done every time I get into this situation, I'm tempted to hack the thing with a huge pair of batteries. I've been curious about this for literally decades, but never tried it. Now seems to be the time, but I don't want to waste money.
Specific questions:
- Are these UPSs smart enough to expect a specific battery capacity? In other words, if it charges for too long will it decide the battery is dead? Or will it continue to charge until the thing is full?
- Does the UPS correctly anticipate low power state and send a shutdown signal right before the threshold gets too low (5 minutes before loss of power, for example)
- Does the UPS correctly show state of the battery?
- Is there something I'm not thinking of that makes this a bad idea?
- I know that automotive lead-acid batteries discharge hydrogen and oxygen during the charging cycle.
- I know that those gases are explosive and not suitable for an enclosed environment. I can compensate by venting to the outside.
- I know that the surge/spike protection is cumulative and the whole works may die right after I set this up.





