Interesting video, but not knowing what an RPS actually was beforehand, I was expecting it to be a kind of UPS. As it's not, it would be good to see some of your views or even reviews on rack mount UPS solutions for a domestic setting. The usage would be to keep a Ubiquiti PoE switch running whilst it powers several PoE cameras, and to keep a NAS running to record footage.
I was under the impression it offered a UPS like capability. Since when he’s hovering over the menu it looks like there is a backup window. I’m not sure if that correlates to just total utilization or actual back up capacity. I would like to see both the switch and RPS unplugged to see if there was any period of time it would stay running.
Great job, I've used Crosstalk in the past to help me with my PBX phone server setup and issues and they always come through. Thank you for all the helpful videos you guys put out. Here at The National Youth Science Academy, we have never had a phone line or a system that worked correctly until we started working with Crosstalk. Thanks again.
One thing you didn't discuss is the fact that the RPS outputs DC power. This could give a slight battery advantage when running on backup batteries you aren't running multiple AC-DC converters. But even bigger than that, this new "standard" give Unifi the ability to release a UPS that could output DC directly meaning it wouldn't have to do DC->AC->DC conversions increasing battery life even more.
Interesting price analysis. Could have done something like PC servers have with modular power supplies and just have each pro device have 2 slots but come with only one filled with a power supply and the user had the option later of adding another psu in the open slot
Also, the price analysis he made was for 6 devices. If you only want dual PSUs for one or two devices it's not that ideal. And I really didn't like liked the price comparison between ubiquit and other, known to be expensive, vendors. The difference isn't just the second Power Option. Also, PSUs aren't that expensive. They certainly wouldn't have to raise their prices hundreds of dollars.
@@AlexKiritz while that might be true for such low power devices like the udmp (even though it should be closer to15$) it's a different story for 500w poe switches But I also agree they should have just put in a slot for a second PSU.
When looking at the device it looks like it is only meant for "limited" fail-over. It only provides 950w and the large Unifi switches are able to draw 750w. (I know that not many do that) but the dual UPS setup will only work if total draw is below 950w. It looks like it is made for one switch failure or smaller stacks of equipment. Not the total loss of AC power to primary supply.
Hi, two questions: FIRST: I'm just wondering if I have 1x UDM-Pro (33W) + 1x Pro 24 PoE Switch (50W) + 4x of U6-LR (4x18,5W) + 3x G5 Pro cam (3x10W) ... which makes a total of 187W, roughly 200W. Are those considerations correctly calculated? If so, how long can the Power Backup (950W) mantein all devices up and running? How can I estimate the time (minutes/hours)? SECOND: How can a plug in also the modem/router in order to power it when electricity goes off. I mean, which unify device/s should I buy? Thanks a lot!!!
@@lachokroumov There is no battery backup in the device, it can not power devices, only prevent that the "unifi device" dies if the power supply in the switch dies. what you are looking for is a UPS, that will run the device if power fails. A UPS is normally rated in VA or watt (for small UPS it does not really make a difference). If you look at a 1200W ups it will normally state runtime at certain load. Could be 5min at 50% load (600W) then you know that you use 200W the runtime will be 15min for you. (remember that your numbers are worst case for the equipment (full load) and real numbers are lower) if 15min is not enough you need to find either a UPS with a bigger battery or buy a "external battery pack" for the UPS. That is only supported for smaller pro models.
You cant compare a hot swap power supply to z non hot swap power supply. If a psu in hot swap switch fails I can change psu while the switch is running, you cant do that with unify switch.
The point of this Ubiquiti product is to allow you to keep the switch running while you can order a new one or swap it from one you have on standby, it is a direct alternative to hot swap PSUs on other enterprise solutions.
@@harrisongilbert it certainly is not an alternative. And there are many situations where a company would prefer to have a proper redundant hot-swap supply. Let's say you have a medium sized floor in an office and you place 2 48 port switches on that floor. Which is not that uncommon in offices. It's not a big setup where you would have a lot of switches all with their own dual power supply. Now, if 1 of those has a failed supply and you use the system from this video, you'll have to replace it outside of office hours which has a much bigger cost compared to dropping by during the day and swapping it out while everyone keeps on working without knowing what has happened. While I do see some uses for this system, I see companies stepping up from no redundancy to this rather then stepping down from hot swap.
My issue with this is they could have just left a space in the other devices to add in a second PSU for the same cost as what they did to allow the connectors. Also, why no battery backup built in? Seems very short sighted. Proprietary is crap.
Yeah the battery backup not built in means you have to have 1U for the distribution of the power that can be done in a 2U ups with cables that are $2-3,- a piece. Also: when a PSU inside a switch fails and you want to fix it, you have to replace the entire switch, that means removing 48 devices from the network that means downtime, in a small office environment that is feasible but in bigger networks that might not be great or simply not possible (think a 24/7 production line or website hosting) Lets do replacement times, lets assume a rack with 3 or 4 x 48 port swiches, nice and full of cables on the front, a PSU fails. 48 port switch with redundant hotswap PSU's, 1 failed needs replacing: unplug the power cable; 20 seconds, remove the PSU from the slot, another 20 seconds, plug the new PSU back in: 20 seconds, total time spend: 1 minute, total downtime: 0 seconds. Same situation, but with this system: 5 seconds per RJ45 port to plug out, thats 4 minutes to unplug all the cables (lets hope there are no special ports with specific configuration on them that you might have to document) then remove the bolts that hold in the switch, another 1-5 minutes, remove the switch from the rack 1-5 minutes, install the new switch into the rack 1-5 minutes, tighten the the screws 1-5 minutes, plug in the power 10 seconds, let the system boot 1-2 minutes?, plug in that massive power cable 10-30 seconds. Time spent: 10-26minutes, downtime: 5-26 minutes. depending on cable density in the rack and the assumption you plug back all the cables in the correct location. It's great that it's easy to configure and looks nice and it looks good on paper, but for real networks that need to be operational 24/7 this is just not an option.
Great review.... But it still blows my mind it doesn't just have a slot on the back for an additional power supply. It just makes more sense to have a spot for one.. rather then another device...Case in point, they already make the Powermodule and they could use that... And it's still not going to be 2500.. 1200 tops
Hot swap PSUs are expensive to design and loud as hell due to the tiny cooling fans and component density. Unifi competes on price so most buyers wouldn't splurge on a redundant PSU anyway. PSU failure on business/enterprise class gear is extremely rare. In 15 years I've had exactly one rackmount switch failure (non-power related) and no server PSU failures.
That's true, but since Ubiquiti doesn't really compete with the real enterprise stuff like e.g. Cisco, the features you get for the amount of money you have to pay are really decent. They had a switch with redundant hot-swap psu's in their beta store some time ago but it never made it to GA and was discontinued
A few things to note:. If the power supply fails then you still need to replace the switch to fix the problem. A Cisco with redudent power supplies can be fixed by switching the power supplies. The switch never goes offline. The Cisco 9300 when stacked can draw power from another switch in the stack should the power fail on one the the other switches. Also Cisco doesn't ship the second power supply. You need to pay extra for that. Ubnt is a great value but some of their products are not enterprises ready. It feels like they are selling half baked products.
Ubiquiti is more aimed for small/medium business. If you want enterprise stuff, ubiquiti has nothing to offer for you (at least nothing that ticks all the boxes you may need)
I truly hope Ubiquiti releases a "smaller" version of this, like a dual port, for smaller installations. If I only have a UDM Pro and want to make it power redundant makes no sense to spend 400 bucks for the RPS!
Interesting idea. I see two issue. 1. If the PSU in the switch fails it will require the switch to be pulled instead of simply pulling and replace the PSU. 2. A UBNT switch could be sold with a single PSU leaving a bay open for an optional redundant PSU. This will allow either PSU to be replaced in the event of a outage without pulling the switch causing an outage. When I had the responsibly for such things I always had spares. Switch, HDD/SSD, PSU for everything in the server room/closet. No need to wait for the RMA.
Great review Chris! But.. Please dont compare hot-swap PSU gear prices with Unifi redundant solution! If PSU dies in Unifi you have to take the whole thing out and replace it while the broken one is in repair. With how-swap PSU gear you just replace the PSU and you are finished! Thats why the price is lower in Unifi solution. It is not redundent for PSU failures - its just resundant for power loss and nothing more. That said, you cant compare prices like you were, its kinda not fair. But awesme job with your videos! Keep up the good work!
I can see a big advantage of having a completely separate RPS. It's not often that multiple primaries would fail at the same time and it eliminates the need for every device to have redundant power supplies and chewing up all that extra power. You are not quite comparing apples to apples comparing high end enterprise to unify products, but interesting. I also would look at the power consumption as well. I think the single RPS will cost a lot less than 6 additional redundant supplies.
Unifi has such a good value now for the entire rack stack. It's just cheaper so have a spare switch laying there than to have redundant power. However, the one down side is that you will need to actually replace the device and have some downtime than just swapping out the power supply. So it's really a matter of business preference for what type of solution you can afford.
I was curious about this feature, but I think, in a production environment, dual hot swappable power supplies are the only reasonable way to go. In the case of a power supply failure, here you still have to change the entire device. They already did it with the ER Infinity
You wouldn’t change the psu until you have some commuted down time. Ask yourself what companies can afford that particular case of downtime vs those who can’t
This is indeed a PITA, as they are way to long and hard. I have 3 of those and they really mess up my rack in the back of it. No idea if they have shorter models available. Will check it out.
Question. When these were still in Beta, Ubiquity indicated that this would only be able to power one device at a time. When you get your other cable can you verify that it can power more than one device? Also, what is the max power output? Can it handle multiple switches with POE? Thanks.
Just been watching your video regarding the RPS. I think my favourite setup with e.g. 4 pro switches would be to have a RPS in front of a UPS with a big battery capacity and then have the primary power source to each of the switches coming directly from the grid i.e. no UPS in front of that source.
Can devices be configured to draw from the RPS by default and use internal psu as fail-over? This would increase overall efficiency and lower device wear.
My only 2 issues are the amount of battery and the insanity of those cables. Personally, I'd rather have a redundant PSU in the Switch, Gateway, etc and use a third-party UPS e.g. APC.
@@RyanMeaux .. Then on their Pro models add $50 (low wattage) to $100 (PoE++) to the price and build-in a redundant PSU. This is how shall I put it delicately .. stupid.
We don't use switches with redundant PSU in the datacenter, but we do use redundant stacked switches with duplicate connections to servers, and unfortunately unifi does not allow LACP over multiple switches. Just like the fiberswitches, the network is completely redundant. So if unifi would enable 'stacking' (could be done via the 10 gbit connection) and then allow LACP over multiple switches, it would do the job
I still prefer the unifi switch l2 POE with dual PSUs - this option with the RPS just means you have an extra device between the second circuit UPS and the devices. Also if the primary power supply fails in any of the devices, you can't just spend the $115 for a new PSU, you have to replace the unit (or fix it with a third party part)
@@bloodcarver913 If you had to support a hundred of them you might think differently. Management cards are awful, dates of manufacture are obfuscated in the serial numbers, firmware updates are painful (for UPS and cards,) can't template the card configs, 5P/5PX models are less reliable than equivalent APC SMT, etc. 9PX's are decent with aforementioned flaws. APC SRT is where it's at.
I use a datacenter that requires you to use redundant power. You can use a PDU with redundant power and plug your single PSU unit or you can use dual PSU devices. I ordered the USP-RPS to fulfill the requirement of redundant power. The DC does this to make it easier to do maintenance. They also use less power by not allowing UPS in the racks. The building has UPS battery backup and diesel generators. The batteries are just there while the generators power on. The down side of the USP-RPS as I understand it, is you can't power up a device off the RPS. You can fail over to it but if the device is off it will not turn on with just the RPS powered up. This is a big issue for me but I don't have any better options...
It solves the problem of the network going down immediately, it buys you time to schedule a maintenance window to replace the switch. They are assuming that the target market for this does not require 100% uptime, scheduled maintenance should be acceptable for the majority of homes and small/medium businesses.
it also solves an issue by allowing you to have one power device on one UPS and one power device on another ups both on different power outlets incase one power rail goes down you still have power on the other rail (this is how most servers do it, one PSU goes to one circuit, and the other PSU goes to another. so if a UPS fails on one or that rail goes down you got the other rail
I have spent close $2500 or just under on Ubiquiti hardware ranging from Switches, AP’s Cameras etc and I run a 700Watt APC UPS that keeps things safe and battery backup when power goes out etc I run 3 of them not all for the Ubiquiti gear but also one for my main desktop and the entertainment equipment so around $800 on battery backup
If your AC power supply dies, you STILL have to replace the unit. Failing over to DC input is nice, but it just kicks the can down the road. If high availability matters, you need to be able to swap out the AC power supply while the unit is running off the RPS.
I have watched a few of your videos and they are quite nice and thanks for your time. So far I had a good experience with Ubiquiti products. I have to say, this product does not make much sense. Yes Cisco has the same thing. I assume, it was an attempt to lock people to buying more Cisco equipment with custom connector. It would have made a lot of sense if it would have provided low voltage DC power directly from UPS battery to improve efficiency. But without battery, I question its usefulness. Maybe it is a stepping stone for a UPS product. But then it uses a custom power connector incompatible with other brands which I do not like to see. Overall, I would have said, do not buy, in most use cases an automatic transfer switch would be a better solution. I understand the PSU failure case. If the application is critical like space shuttle, an airplane etc. which will crash if system fails, then I would understand the small extra cost for redundant PSUis not so big deal. But in such cases, having extra budget of few thousand usd/euro is probably also nothing. Luckily for normal use cases PSUs are more than reliable enough... In general power supplies are so reliable today that some companies give 10+ year (even lifetime) warranty to them. It would make much more sense to use an ATS system instead. Yes they are little bit more expensive but usually can support any(from different manuacturers) equipment which has a power socket/plug from any manufacturer usually up to a whopping 16A. Eg: shop.powerwalker.com/10120543.html?language=en I think your math is little bit off. Yes Cisco and Aruba are expensive. But you should not compare the switch vs switch price,. The question is how much an extra power supply add to the price. The 48POE switch has 660W PSU and 650W ATX PSU (which is more complicated to produce as it provides 3 voltages) can be found with retail price < 50USD. Ubiquiti could just leave an empty slot for user to slide it in when needed. I suggest going to newegg and look for redundant power supply prices. Non cisco/aruba ones are actually quite cheap. I also think that your review is somewhat misleading. You should have short circuited the PSU of your switch with a screwdriver :) and then document the actions you needed to take to rectify the issue. Turning the power off is not testing the PSU failure, it tests power failure. Maybe an actual PSU failure in this product may take out the RPS system also. Who knows? In addition, the user is penalized if they buy 1-2 unifi devices then the USP-RPS which can power 6 devices. There is much overhead in the cost. On top of that, if you have your devices in different racks, well too bad for you. In addition, if you mix devices from different brands you won't be able to use the same RPS unit. Also, lets say the built-in power supply is actually broken in your 48POE switch. You have no choice but to change the whole switch. Hmm? But power supplies rarely get broken so maybe Ubiquiti is relying on that. Here is a hot swappable example which has similar pricing: (although they cheat on the power budget, it is half of the advertised for single PSU) www.fs.com/de-en/products/115386.html?attribute=5271&id=205749
The UDM Pro and Pro switches should be connected to both power and the RPS (Redundant Power Supply) for proper operation. Power is required for the devices to function, and the RPS provides redundancy in case of a power failure.
Chris can you tell me the depth of the RPS power connector, including bending the cable up/down. I have a wall mount rack and with the 48 port POE Pro switch, there is only 2" between the back of the switch and the wall, wondering if that large connector would fit with bending the cable up or down, or if I'd have to cut a hole in the wall for the cable bend/radius/depth. thanks
Interesting approach to redundant power... With this proprietary solution UI gets a lot more profit than if they used 3rd party hot swap PSUs. Also most SMB solutions don’t have 6 devices in one location (closet). And finally for the SMB solutions with multiple device locations this proprietary RPS solution would actually cost more than redundant PSUs in each device especially with 1 or 7 devices in a location. These issues combined with the fact that replacing a failed PS in a UI RPS enabled device requires downtime and swapping the entire switch/device really limits the usefulness of UI’s redundant power solution. While I appreciate UI offering power redundancy the profit margin appears to have steered the solution offered. Can’t completely blame them for wanting more profit but this decision has limited the usefulness and cost effectiveness of redundant power for some customers. But it is great to see UI continue to add more enterprise features to their products. Like Chris said they are not designed to compete with the feature set of other enterprise solutions costing way more, but UI continues to get closer with each new product line. Great review Chris!
This solution can work only where there is two means of power circuit. I am looking at where only one means of power supply is available then this solution might not work. good job sir.
Thank you for getting good practical info on these new UniFi products out into the wild. Could you do a video highlighting VPN capabilities of the new UDM and UDM-P? Specifically routing a separate SSID through an always on IPSEC VPN connected to a remote site or VPN service provider? It would be much appreciated!
So in the best case, thats an additional $90 per device for a shared hot spare PSU, at half capacity an extra $152 per device. I can see what they are trying to do, but in my opinion by not making the primary psu hot-swap they remove ⅔ of the value
Hey Chris! Great video! I just bought a UDM Pro, Gen2 48-port POE switch, and a USP-RPS. Would I only plug the UDM Pro and the switch into the USP-RPS.... or would I plug both into the USP-RPS AND the regular outlet? Thanks!!
Itis a nice idea and would be ok, but it could be taken so much further. You could get switches with two of the RPS power connectors and no internal power supply. You then get two of the RPS units, each actively powering three units and providing backup power to the other three .... Now I can relocate all the heat generation from power conversion into those two units and cool them. You could also take it to the next step and add a power tansfer cable between the two RPS so if their incoming power is disrupted the can cross-power each other. Add some UPS units adn you could have some nicely redundant systems.
most likely to save cost on the base unit itself. In this way, rather than making the switch a few hundred dollars more with two PSUs you sell the base unit cheaper to everyone and then those that want redundant power pay for the RPS. Also, two PSUs in the switch, router, or nvr will take up physical space in each unit. Since this is a DC supply...the power from it is connected directly to the device it is powering making the only needed space in the chassis one for the connector itself....of course you eat up 1U of space in the rack...but it sure makes design and manufacture of all the supplied units that much simpler and cheaper.
1 RPS replaces 6 redundant integrated power supplies being overall cheaper while getting a better efficiency curve. Drawback replacing the switch instead of hotplugging a PSU introduces downtime.
Exactly. It would have been for more customer-oriented to design the units to have two PSU slots and supply with just one populated. Instead they are providing one slot and one built-in supply so the switch still has to be taken out ultimately for repair. Poor solution for pro/semi enterprise use.
@@Rosscoff2000 Very true but than again this would add to the cost for those that don't need it because the whole thing needs to be designed to support 2 internal PSU full time. Influencing total higher internal heat generated and cooling solution, the overall internal electronic component choices etc. So this would raise the price firmly and overall ubiquiti is not enterprise material.
I have to say, i'm not a big fan of this setup type. If that main PSU were to fail for any reason, then the only way to fix the main PSU is to get a new switch, or just leave it on backup the whole time. If they had the main PSU as modular, and this one as redundant, then I can at least replace the basd PSU.
Same design like Cisco switches, proprietary cables for redundant power, psu not hot swappable (at least not for all of their switch line-up with such a DC connector
Thanks for the review. Saw in a previous video in which the it showed the USP-RPS and I was wondering what Ubiquiti gear was that. For a RPS it's at a reasonable price and it's something that I will probably add to my network setup.
Chris, I came late. I don't get RPS. Why not just use a UPS and be done with it? in a small office it will at least give you time to do a proper shutdown. Just watched the first 5.5 minutes I missed. I see it now. Very good idea. you can buy 1 RPS and 5 cables instead of 6 add-on power supplies. good idea.
@@daveolson9424 most likely to save cost on the base unit itself. In this way, rather than making the switch a few hundred dollars more with two PSUs you sell the base unit cheaper to everyone and then those that want redundant power pay for the RPS. Also, two PSUs in the switch, router, or nvr will take up physical space in each unit. Since this is a DC supply...the power from it is connected directly to the device it is powering making the only needed space in the chassis one for the connector itself....of course you eat up 1U of space in the rack...but it sure makes design and manufacture of all the supplied units that much simpler and cheaper. I copy this from Giovanni Mercuri's comment thx
Thanks for the video! It would be awesome if Ubiquiti would consider making an EdgePower with redundant hot-swappable power supplies, like the EP-54V-150W but for 24V, so that one could provide redundant power to EdgeRouter and EdgeSwitch devices that use 24VDC input. Would be great for WISPs and micro-pops or relay stations imho. The EP-24V-72W definitely has its use cases too, but it lacks redundant AC power input.
The Unifi US-16-XG has wide input DC connectors on the back and the USW-Flex-Mini has both PoE power and USB-C power. Maybe add these to your reviews for potential redundant power solutions. If you are looking to run multiple switches in a rack, you are going to want at least a US-16-XG, granted this is older generation at this point. If you have redundant firewalls, well they can't both plug into the single port the ISP provides, so need something in-between, but only need a few ports. Does it make sense to use a cheapy 5-port dumb switch and then at some point have it glitch up and you are either dead in the water or you have weird packet loss issues you can't figure out down the road? Does it make sense to buy a large, expensive switch with many more ports than you will ever use because it has redundant power supplies? Or would it make more sense to use a USW-Flex-Mini with PoE power from a managed Unifi switch with just say the management network available over it and the remaining ports only doing the Internet VLAN while also having cheap USB-C power going in for redundant power?
This is a dumb idea. Eaton sells redundant power switch technology, with this USP-RPS requires you to own two battery backup units on main, and your backup. I'd suggest getting a gas generator instead.. higher power to weight ratio.
One thing you didn't mention, or test, is that this device CANNOT COLD BOOT a switch or UDM-Pro/SE that has a failed power supply. In other words, if the connected Switch's internal power supply fails and the USP RPS takes over you are fine as long as it doesn't also lose power. However, if the USP RPS subsequently loses power, then you completely lose the switch AND you cannot power it back on using just the RPS. A bit of an oversight on UBNT's part in my opinion but still better than nothing I suppose.
so if your power supply dies and the unit switches to the RPS which is great; but why not make the built in power supply hot swappable as well. That way you can run on the RPS until you can change out the power supply? otherwise you will still have to shut the unit down and replace or wait for an RMA...
Good video but heads up for those watching, Ubiquiti hardware/software is not "Enterprise grade" as he mentioned. Enterprise grade hardware is Aruba, Cisco, Fortinet, Checkpoint, Palo Alto etc.
So, I'm confused. Does this only help if the PSU in a switch or UDM dies, but not if there's a power outage? I didn't see any batteries in the case, but was under the impression that this was a type of UPS, which it appears it is not?
So this RPS unit only works with the PRO switches correct. There’s no way to use it with the other rack mount switches that don’t have the Pro name attached?
Nice video tks! Does anyone can tell me what kind of screws you use in this rack (like the on you use at 5min50s ? I'm searching for a solution with screws you can manipulate without screwdriver :)
Is there a notification if power to the USP unit is interrupted? In my case primary power to switches will be via Cyberpower UPS, and this unifi USP will be backup if the Cyberpower runs out.
is there a recommendation on the UPS that would be needed to battery back up the device? Does it need to be a pure sine wave? what would be an appropriate voltage?
Like a billion other people said, for REDUNDANT power, they could have just done the "we have two ports but only give you one PSU" thing that literally *everyone else* does. If they're going to make a big-assed rack-mounted piece of gear, they could have at least put a freakin' BATTERY in it!!
It is a very interesting product, BUT, without a battery for UPS type power backup I think it drops a bit short. I could se this, if you had a bit of mone to throw around, as a backup in several network cabinets to ensure the network stays up if there is a blackout keeping things as cameras, network equipment and NVR running. Nah, this is a little bit of a swing and amiss for me unfortunately...
I think even tho I only currently have the UDM-Pro that would work with it that I would still buy it. Being that the UDM-Pro is my only router and controller having the power supply fail just once and the RPS there to keep us afloat till I can get a replacement IMHO is worth the money. Also I have a hunch that Ubiquiti only putting this on the Pro versions of the equipment is there trial run to see how it fairs. I’m thinking it may be something we see on all the equipment in the future.
I personally would rather have something like the second PSU being modular. Something you could buy later, slide in, then plug directly into 120v outlet. In those scenarios where switches are not in the same location, but desire redundant power then would potentially make this solution more expensive than competitors.
So for $550 (with cables) you get 1 redundant power supply to share with 6 devices. And if the RPS goes down, all 6 are unprotected. Do I have this right? If so, no thanks.
It still gives you AC redundancy, and the probability of the RPS going down is low. It's inexpensive protection for the AC power supply in each of the devices it's connected to.
dodeca hedron I ordered one, hasn’t arrived yet. I have a DreamMachine Pro and the new 48 port POE switch, both with RPS connectors. I have 2 different circuit breaker panels, one is backed up by a generator. will be using a circuit from each, into a UPS, then one to the AC supplies, the other to the RPS.. That’s plenty of redudancy for me. Pretty much guarantees power to the network until generator runs out of fuel (has a 1,000 gallon underground propane tank, not too likely unless it’s the Zombie Apocolypse, then we have bigger issues)
Hi can you confirm something for me on the RPS... the fans never come on....even if manually ramped up on the touchpad to 100% . Can you see if yours works.
Interesting video, but not knowing what an RPS actually was beforehand, I was expecting it to be a kind of UPS. As it's not, it would be good to see some of your views or even reviews on rack mount UPS solutions for a domestic setting. The usage would be to keep a Ubiquiti PoE switch running whilst it powers several PoE cameras, and to keep a NAS running to record footage.
I was under the impression it offered a UPS like capability. Since when he’s hovering over the menu it looks like there is a backup window. I’m not sure if that correlates to just total utilization or actual back up capacity. I would like to see both the switch and RPS unplugged to see if there was any period of time it would stay running.
2:22 I've never noticed the UAP clock in the background before. LOL. That is awesome!
Great job, I've used Crosstalk in the past to help me with my PBX phone server setup and issues and they always come through. Thank you for all the helpful videos you guys put out. Here at The National Youth Science Academy, we have never had a phone line or a system that worked correctly until we started working with Crosstalk. Thanks again.
One thing you didn't discuss is the fact that the RPS outputs DC power. This could give a slight battery advantage when running on backup batteries you aren't running multiple AC-DC converters. But even bigger than that, this new "standard" give Unifi the ability to release a UPS that could output DC directly meaning it wouldn't have to do DC->AC->DC conversions increasing battery life even more.
Interesting price analysis. Could have done something like PC servers have with modular power supplies and just have each pro device have 2 slots but come with only one filled with a power supply and the user had the option later of adding another psu in the open slot
Also, the price analysis he made was for 6 devices. If you only want dual PSUs for one or two devices it's not that ideal. And I really didn't like liked the price comparison between ubiquit and other, known to be expensive, vendors. The difference isn't just the second Power Option.
Also, PSUs aren't that expensive. They certainly wouldn't have to raise their prices hundreds of dollars.
Yes. The power supply in UDM Pro probably cost about $2. That huge custom connector probably cost more than a second generic power supply.
@@AlexKiritz while that might be true for such low power devices like the udmp (even though it should be closer to15$) it's a different story for 500w poe switches
But I also agree they should have just put in a slot for a second PSU.
@@AlexKiritzdefinitely not 2-3 bucks chump lol 😊
I really hope they have a Unifi PDU in their near future, that would be an awesome addition
When looking at the device it looks like it is only meant for "limited" fail-over. It only provides 950w and the large Unifi switches are able to draw 750w. (I know that not many do that) but the dual UPS setup will only work if total draw is below 950w. It looks like it is made for one switch failure or smaller stacks of equipment. Not the total loss of AC power to primary supply.
No doubt you're entering a multi RPS requirement if you are running multiple high draw switches. I'm ok with that personally.
Hi, two questions:
FIRST: I'm just wondering if I have 1x UDM-Pro (33W) + 1x Pro 24 PoE Switch (50W) + 4x of U6-LR (4x18,5W) + 3x G5 Pro cam (3x10W) ... which makes a total of 187W, roughly 200W. Are those considerations correctly calculated? If so, how long can the Power Backup (950W) mantein all devices up and running? How can I estimate the time (minutes/hours)?
SECOND: How can a plug in also the modem/router in order to power it when electricity goes off. I mean, which unify device/s should I buy?
Thanks a lot!!!
@@lachokroumov There is no battery backup in the device, it can not power devices, only prevent that the "unifi device" dies if the power supply in the switch dies. what you are looking for is a UPS, that will run the device if power fails. A UPS is normally rated in VA or watt (for small UPS it does not really make a difference). If you look at a 1200W ups it will normally state runtime at certain load. Could be 5min at 50% load (600W) then you know that you use 200W the runtime will be 15min for you. (remember that your numbers are worst case for the equipment (full load) and real numbers are lower) if 15min is not enough you need to find either a UPS with a bigger battery or buy a "external battery pack" for the UPS. That is only supported for smaller pro models.
Thanks for showing the insides! I love to see the bare electronics
You cant compare a hot swap power supply to z non hot swap power supply. If a psu in hot swap switch fails I can change psu while the switch is running, you cant do that with unify switch.
The point of this Ubiquiti product is to allow you to keep the switch running while you can order a new one or swap it from one you have on standby, it is a direct alternative to hot swap PSUs on other enterprise solutions.
@@harrisongilbert Hmm, I hope you mean it is NOT a direct alternative. Swapping switches gives downtime, swapping hot-swap psu's does not.
@@harrisongilbert it certainly is not an alternative. And there are many situations where a company would prefer to have a proper redundant hot-swap supply. Let's say you have a medium sized floor in an office and you place 2 48 port switches on that floor. Which is not that uncommon in offices. It's not a big setup where you would have a lot of switches all with their own dual power supply. Now, if 1 of those has a failed supply and you use the system from this video, you'll have to replace it outside of office hours which has a much bigger cost compared to dropping by during the day and swapping it out while everyone keeps on working without knowing what has happened.
While I do see some uses for this system, I see companies stepping up from no redundancy to this rather then stepping down from hot swap.
My issue with this is they could have just left a space in the other devices to add in a second PSU for the same cost as what they did to allow the connectors. Also, why no battery backup built in? Seems very short sighted.
Proprietary is crap.
Yeah the battery backup not built in means you have to have 1U for the distribution of the power that can be done in a 2U ups with cables that are $2-3,- a piece.
Also: when a PSU inside a switch fails and you want to fix it, you have to replace the entire switch, that means removing 48 devices from the network that means downtime, in a small office environment that is feasible but in bigger networks that might not be great or simply not possible (think a 24/7 production line or website hosting)
Lets do replacement times, lets assume a rack with 3 or 4 x 48 port swiches, nice and full of cables on the front, a PSU fails.
48 port switch with redundant hotswap PSU's, 1 failed needs replacing: unplug the power cable; 20 seconds, remove the PSU from the slot, another 20 seconds, plug the new PSU back in: 20 seconds, total time spend: 1 minute, total downtime: 0 seconds.
Same situation, but with this system: 5 seconds per RJ45 port to plug out, thats 4 minutes to unplug all the cables (lets hope there are no special ports with specific configuration on them that you might have to document) then remove the bolts that hold in the switch, another 1-5 minutes, remove the switch from the rack 1-5 minutes, install the new switch into the rack 1-5 minutes, tighten the the screws 1-5 minutes, plug in the power 10 seconds, let the system boot 1-2 minutes?, plug in that massive power cable 10-30 seconds.
Time spent: 10-26minutes, downtime: 5-26 minutes. depending on cable density in the rack and the assumption you plug back all the cables in the correct location.
It's great that it's easy to configure and looks nice and it looks good on paper, but for real networks that need to be operational 24/7 this is just not an option.
5:28 That tiny cable you see alongside the ethernet connection is for the tiny status LED inside the RJ45 jack
Actually it looks like it's for the "reset" recessed switch next to the RJ45 jack.
Great review.... But it still blows my mind it doesn't just have a slot on the back for an additional power supply. It just makes more sense to have a spot for one.. rather then another device...Case in point, they already make the Powermodule and they could use that... And it's still not going to be 2500.. 1200 tops
Agreed. Also, if the RPS goes out, you lose redundancy for all devices connected to it too.
Hot swap PSUs are expensive to design and loud as hell due to the tiny cooling fans and component density. Unifi competes on price so most buyers wouldn't splurge on a redundant PSU anyway. PSU failure on business/enterprise class gear is extremely rare. In 15 years I've had exactly one rackmount switch failure (non-power related) and no server PSU failures.
That's true, but since Ubiquiti doesn't really compete with the real enterprise stuff like e.g. Cisco, the features you get for the amount of money you have to pay are really decent. They had a switch with redundant hot-swap psu's in their beta store some time ago but it never made it to GA and was discontinued
@@gtwannabe2 fans do not have to be the issue. You could place them in front of the PSU inside the case.
Looking forward to another home improvement video for when you move
The chat had ended when I sent it
A few things to note:. If the power supply fails then you still need to replace the switch to fix the problem. A Cisco with redudent power supplies can be fixed by switching the power supplies. The switch never goes offline.
The Cisco 9300 when stacked can draw power from another switch in the stack should the power fail on one the the other switches. Also Cisco doesn't ship the second power supply. You need to pay extra for that.
Ubnt is a great value but some of their products are not enterprises ready. It feels like they are selling half baked products.
Ubiquiti is more aimed for small/medium business. If you want enterprise stuff, ubiquiti has nothing to offer for you (at least nothing that ticks all the boxes you may need)
i still chuckle every time you throw the quickstart guide on the ground lol
Guys don't RTFM unless they have to! :-)
I truly hope Ubiquiti releases a "smaller" version of this, like a dual port, for smaller installations.
If I only have a UDM Pro and want to make it power redundant makes no sense to spend 400 bucks for the RPS!
Interesting idea. I see two issue. 1. If the PSU in the switch fails it will require the switch to be pulled instead of simply pulling and replace the PSU. 2. A UBNT switch could be sold with a single PSU leaving a bay open for an optional redundant PSU. This will allow either PSU to be replaced in the event of a outage without pulling the switch causing an outage.
When I had the responsibly for such things I always had spares. Switch, HDD/SSD, PSU for everything in the server room/closet. No need to wait for the RMA.
Great review Chris! But.. Please dont compare hot-swap PSU gear prices with Unifi redundant solution! If PSU dies in Unifi you have to take the whole thing out and replace it while the broken one is in repair. With how-swap PSU gear you just replace the PSU and you are finished! Thats why the price is lower in Unifi solution. It is not redundent for PSU failures - its just resundant for power loss and nothing more. That said, you cant compare prices like you were, its kinda not fair. But awesme job with your videos! Keep up the good work!
The little cable from the Ethernet Board is most likely for the RJ-45 Jack lights.
The little wire going to the board with the Ethernet is for the reset button.
I can see a big advantage of having a completely separate RPS. It's not often that multiple primaries would fail at the same time and it eliminates the need for every device to have redundant power supplies and chewing up all that extra power.
You are not quite comparing apples to apples comparing high end enterprise to unify products, but interesting. I also would look at the power consumption as well. I think the single RPS will cost a lot less than 6 additional redundant supplies.
Very true on cost
Personally I'd much rather have two hot-swapable bays that comes with one hot-swap power supply and if you want the second buy it extra.
👍
Unifi has such a good value now for the entire rack stack. It's just cheaper so have a spare switch laying there than to have redundant power. However, the one down side is that you will need to actually replace the device and have some downtime than just swapping out the power supply. So it's really a matter of business preference for what type of solution you can afford.
I was curious about this feature, but I think, in a production environment, dual hot swappable power supplies are the only reasonable way to go. In the case of a power supply failure, here you still have to change the entire device. They already did it with the ER Infinity
You wouldn’t change the psu until you have some commuted down time. Ask yourself what companies can afford that particular case of downtime vs those who can’t
Good video. You said it yourself, is Unifi enterprise equipment? I don't think they are there yet especially on the wired side of the products
How is the big fat cables going to mess up the back of the switch area, they seem hard to wrap around?
This is indeed a PITA, as they are way to long and hard. I have 3 of those and they really mess up my rack in the back of it. No idea if they have shorter models available. Will check it out.
Question. When these were still in Beta, Ubiquity indicated that this would only be able to power one device at a time. When you get your other cable can you verify that it can power more than one device? Also, what is the max power output? Can it handle multiple switches with POE? Thanks.
Just been watching your video regarding the RPS. I think my favourite setup with e.g. 4 pro switches would be to have a RPS in front of a UPS with a big battery capacity and then have the primary power source to each of the switches coming directly from the grid i.e. no UPS in front of that source.
When it comes do a video on the new NVR.
I just saw that in the store. My big ask from UniFi is to allow redundant offnet video storage. If not live, at lest scheduled backups.
I just deployed one today, would love an off-site back up ability
Unifi should still make the main power in the device hot swappable IMO
This is good and I would probably put this in my home. For enterprise deployment, most would require hot swap parts.
Can devices be configured to draw from the RPS by default and use internal psu as fail-over? This would increase overall efficiency and lower device wear.
There isn't a way to do that this I saw.
@@CrosstalkSolutions The psu do a self check am not to sure ,before it starts maybe
My only 2 issues are the amount of battery and the insanity of those cables. Personally, I'd rather have a redundant PSU in the Switch, Gateway, etc and use a third-party UPS e.g. APC.
D Jaquith FYI no battery in RPS. Just redundant power. Sorry if you understood that already.
@@RyanMeaux .. Then on their Pro models add $50 (low wattage) to $100 (PoE++) to the price and build-in a redundant PSU. This is how shall I put it delicately .. stupid.
We don't use switches with redundant PSU in the datacenter, but we do use redundant stacked switches with duplicate connections to servers, and unfortunately unifi does not allow LACP over multiple switches. Just like the fiberswitches, the network is completely redundant. So if unifi would enable 'stacking' (could be done via the 10 gbit connection) and then allow LACP over multiple switches, it would do the job
I still prefer the unifi switch l2 POE with dual PSUs - this option with the RPS just means you have an extra device between the second circuit UPS and the devices. Also if the primary power supply fails in any of the devices, you can't just spend the $115 for a new PSU, you have to replace the unit (or fix it with a third party part)
am I the only one that would love for Ubiquiti to come out with a line of UPS devices themselves?
Eaton already rocks though
YES PLEASE
UA-camrs would find some way to complain about it...
sad, but true.
@@bloodcarver913 If you had to support a hundred of them you might think differently. Management cards are awful, dates of manufacture are obfuscated in the serial numbers, firmware updates are painful (for UPS and cards,) can't template the card configs, 5P/5PX models are less reliable than equivalent APC SMT, etc. 9PX's are decent with aforementioned flaws. APC SRT is where it's at.
Yet they still don’t allow storage flexibility and additional drive options. Proprietary connectors are frustrating though.
highly underrated channel! super interesting and informative.
I use a datacenter that requires you to use redundant power. You can use a PDU with redundant power and plug your single PSU unit or you can use dual PSU devices. I ordered the USP-RPS to fulfill the requirement of redundant power. The DC does this to make it easier to do maintenance. They also use less power by not allowing UPS in the racks. The building has UPS battery backup and diesel generators. The batteries are just there while the generators power on.
The down side of the USP-RPS as I understand it, is you can't power up a device off the RPS. You can fail over to it but if the device is off it will not turn on with just the RPS powered up. This is a big issue for me but I don't have any better options...
Where did you order one. I dont even see this on Ubiquiti's site anymore. Does CDW have it or something?
@@railerswim Got mine on Amazon shipped from CA to the US. it was over priced but I needed it.
But it doesn't solve the problem. If the AC power port dies, you still have to replace the switch. Hot swappable would be able to replace just the PSU
It solves the problem of the network going down immediately, it buys you time to schedule a maintenance window to replace the switch. They are assuming that the target market for this does not require 100% uptime, scheduled maintenance should be acceptable for the majority of homes and small/medium businesses.
it also solves an issue by allowing you to have one power device on one UPS and one power device on another ups both on different power outlets incase one power rail goes down you still have power on the other rail (this is how most servers do it, one PSU goes to one circuit, and the other PSU goes to another. so if a UPS fails on one or that rail goes down you got the other rail
I have spent close $2500 or just under on Ubiquiti hardware ranging from Switches, AP’s Cameras etc and I run a 700Watt APC UPS that keeps things safe and battery backup when power goes out etc I run 3 of them not all for the Ubiquiti gear but also one for my main desktop and the entertainment equipment so around $800 on battery backup
If your AC power supply dies, you STILL have to replace the unit. Failing over to DC input is nice, but it just kicks the can down the road. If high availability matters, you need to be able to swap out the AC power supply while the unit is running off the RPS.
I have watched a few of your videos and they are quite nice and thanks for your time. So far I had a good experience with Ubiquiti products. I have to say, this product does not make much sense. Yes Cisco has the same thing. I assume, it was an attempt to lock people to buying more Cisco equipment with custom connector. It would have made a lot of sense if it would have provided low voltage DC power directly from UPS battery to improve efficiency. But without battery, I question its usefulness. Maybe it is a stepping stone for a UPS product. But then it uses a custom power connector incompatible with other brands which I do not like to see.
Overall, I would have said, do not buy, in most use cases an automatic transfer switch would be a better solution. I understand the PSU failure case. If the application is critical like space shuttle, an airplane etc. which will crash if system fails, then I would understand the small extra cost for redundant PSUis not so big deal. But in such cases, having extra budget of few thousand usd/euro is probably also nothing. Luckily for normal use cases PSUs are more than reliable enough...
In general power supplies are so reliable today that some companies give 10+ year (even lifetime) warranty to them. It would make much more sense to use an ATS system instead. Yes they are little bit more expensive but usually can support any(from different manuacturers) equipment which has a power socket/plug from any manufacturer usually up to a whopping 16A. Eg: shop.powerwalker.com/10120543.html?language=en
I think your math is little bit off. Yes Cisco and Aruba are expensive. But you should not compare the switch vs switch price,. The question is how much an extra power supply add to the price. The 48POE switch has 660W PSU and 650W ATX PSU (which is more complicated to produce as it provides 3 voltages) can be found with retail price < 50USD. Ubiquiti could just leave an empty slot for user to slide it in when needed. I suggest going to newegg and look for redundant power supply prices. Non cisco/aruba ones are actually quite cheap.
I also think that your review is somewhat misleading. You should have short circuited the PSU of your switch with a screwdriver :) and then document the actions you needed to take to rectify the issue. Turning the power off is not testing the PSU failure, it tests power failure. Maybe an actual PSU failure in this product may take out the RPS system also. Who knows?
In addition, the user is penalized if they buy 1-2 unifi devices then the USP-RPS which can power 6 devices. There is much overhead in the cost. On top of that, if you have your devices in different racks, well too bad for you. In addition, if you mix devices from different brands you won't be able to use the same RPS unit. Also, lets say the built-in power supply is actually broken in your 48POE switch. You have no choice but to change the whole switch. Hmm? But power supplies rarely get broken so maybe Ubiquiti is relying on that.
Here is a hot swappable example which has similar pricing: (although they cheat on the power budget, it is half of the advertised for single PSU)
www.fs.com/de-en/products/115386.html?attribute=5271&id=205749
The UDM Pro and Pro switches should be connected to both power and the RPS (Redundant Power Supply) for proper operation. Power is required for the devices to function, and the RPS provides redundancy in case of a power failure.
Chris can you tell me the depth of the RPS power connector, including bending the cable up/down. I have a wall mount rack and with the 48 port POE Pro switch, there is only 2" between the back of the switch and the wall, wondering if that large connector would fit with bending the cable up or down, or if I'd have to cut a hole in the wall for the cable bend/radius/depth. thanks
Interesting approach to redundant power... With this proprietary solution UI gets a lot more profit than if they used 3rd party hot swap PSUs. Also most SMB solutions don’t have 6 devices in one location (closet). And finally for the SMB solutions with multiple device locations this proprietary RPS solution would actually cost more than redundant PSUs in each device especially with 1 or 7 devices in a location. These issues combined with the fact that replacing a failed PS in a UI RPS enabled device requires downtime and swapping the entire switch/device really limits the usefulness of UI’s redundant power solution. While I appreciate UI offering power redundancy the profit margin appears to have steered the solution offered. Can’t completely blame them for wanting more profit but this decision has limited the usefulness and cost effectiveness of redundant power for some customers. But it is great to see UI continue to add more enterprise features to their products. Like Chris said they are not designed to compete with the feature set of other enterprise solutions costing way more, but UI continues to get closer with each new product line. Great review Chris!
"Don't turn it on ... _Take it apart!"_
This solution can work only where there is two means of power circuit. I am looking at where only one means of power supply is available then this solution might not work. good job sir.
Thank you for getting good practical info on these new UniFi products out into the wild. Could you do a video highlighting VPN capabilities of the new UDM and UDM-P? Specifically routing a separate SSID through an always on IPSEC VPN connected to a remote site or VPN service provider? It would be much appreciated!
5:30 - almost positive that would be the wires for the reset button next to the ethernet port.
Trying to understand this better. Is it battery backup power or just a backup power supply that still requires its own power?
So in the best case, thats an additional $90 per device for a shared hot spare PSU,
at half capacity an extra $152 per device.
I can see what they are trying to do, but in my opinion by not making the primary psu hot-swap they remove ⅔ of the value
Hey Chris! Great video! I just bought a UDM Pro, Gen2 48-port POE switch, and a USP-RPS. Would I only plug the UDM Pro and the switch into the USP-RPS.... or would I plug both into the USP-RPS AND the regular outlet? Thanks!!
Itis a nice idea and would be ok, but it could be taken so much further. You could get switches with two of the RPS power connectors and no internal power supply. You then get two of the RPS units, each actively powering three units and providing backup power to the other three .... Now I can relocate all the heat generation from power conversion into those two units and cool them. You could also take it to the next step and add a power tansfer cable between the two RPS so if their incoming power is disrupted the can cross-power each other. Add some UPS units adn you could have some nicely redundant systems.
Why not using 2 hot-plugable PSUs?
most likely to save cost on the base unit itself. In this way, rather than making the switch a few hundred dollars more with two PSUs you sell the base unit cheaper to everyone and then those that want redundant power pay for the RPS. Also, two PSUs in the switch, router, or nvr will take up physical space in each unit. Since this is a DC supply...the power from it is connected directly to the device it is powering making the only needed space in the chassis one for the connector itself....of course you eat up 1U of space in the rack...but it sure makes design and manufacture of all the supplied units that much simpler and cheaper.
1 RPS replaces 6 redundant integrated power supplies being overall cheaper while getting a better efficiency curve. Drawback replacing the switch instead of hotplugging a PSU introduces downtime.
@@ChristianSamselif one of them has a fault the whole switch must be replaced instead of buy a psu and replace the faulty one
*to ensure redundancy
Exactly. It would have been for more customer-oriented to design the units to have two PSU slots and supply with just one populated. Instead they are providing one slot and one built-in supply so the switch still has to be taken out ultimately for repair.
Poor solution for pro/semi enterprise use.
@@Rosscoff2000 Very true but than again this would add to the cost for those that don't need it because the whole thing needs to be designed to support 2 internal PSU full time. Influencing total higher internal heat generated and cooling solution, the overall internal electronic component choices etc. So this would raise the price firmly and overall ubiquiti is not enterprise material.
I have to say, i'm not a big fan of this setup type. If that main PSU were to fail for any reason, then the only way to fix the main PSU is to get a new switch, or just leave it on backup the whole time. If they had the main PSU as modular, and this one as redundant, then I can at least replace the basd PSU.
Same design like Cisco switches, proprietary cables for redundant power, psu not hot swappable (at least not for all of their switch line-up with such a DC connector
Thanks for the review. Saw in a previous video in which the it showed the USP-RPS and I was wondering what Ubiquiti gear was that.
For a RPS it's at a reasonable price and it's something that I will probably add to my network setup.
Nice review. Can you get multiple usurps devices ? I am assuming yes if you have more thank 6 devices.
Chris, I came late. I don't get RPS. Why not just use a UPS and be done with it? in a small office it will at least give you time to do a proper shutdown.
Just watched the first 5.5 minutes I missed. I see it now. Very good idea. you can buy 1 RPS and 5 cables instead of 6 add-on power supplies. good idea.
In the case of UPS or PSU inside failure.
It's for A and B power.. But I don't get why it has to be external.. Another large cable to clutter..
@@daveolson9424 most likely to save cost on the base unit itself. In this way, rather than making the switch a few hundred dollars more with two PSUs you sell the base unit cheaper to everyone and then those that want redundant power pay for the RPS. Also, two PSUs in the switch, router, or nvr will take up physical space in each unit. Since this is a DC supply...the power from it is connected directly to the device it is powering making the only needed space in the chassis one for the connector itself....of course you eat up 1U of space in the rack...but it sure makes design and manufacture of all the supplied units that much simpler and cheaper.
I copy this from Giovanni Mercuri's comment thx
I don't need this but I still want it 😂🤓
You'be better off getting a UPS Battery Backup unit, before buying this "advanced" battery switcher.
Great presentation, Chris. I agree, great concept, too.
Thanks for the video! It would be awesome if Ubiquiti would consider making an EdgePower with redundant hot-swappable power supplies, like the EP-54V-150W but for 24V, so that one could provide redundant power to EdgeRouter and EdgeSwitch devices that use 24VDC input. Would be great for WISPs and micro-pops or relay stations imho. The EP-24V-72W definitely has its use cases too, but it lacks redundant AC power input.
Great video Chris, I have been waiting to see this in action before I bought one. Thank you for the great content
That's not a molex power connector, its a IEC320C13.
If you cant swap the power supply in the device that want down without shutting the device down what good is it?
The Unifi US-16-XG has wide input DC connectors on the back and the USW-Flex-Mini has both PoE power and USB-C power. Maybe add these to your reviews for potential redundant power solutions. If you are looking to run multiple switches in a rack, you are going to want at least a US-16-XG, granted this is older generation at this point.
If you have redundant firewalls, well they can't both plug into the single port the ISP provides, so need something in-between, but only need a few ports. Does it make sense to use a cheapy 5-port dumb switch and then at some point have it glitch up and you are either dead in the water or you have weird packet loss issues you can't figure out down the road? Does it make sense to buy a large, expensive switch with many more ports than you will ever use because it has redundant power supplies? Or would it make more sense to use a USW-Flex-Mini with PoE power from a managed Unifi switch with just say the management network available over it and the remaining ports only doing the Internet VLAN while also having cheap USB-C power going in for redundant power?
So without redundant power, do you have to buy a USURPS for your USP-RPS?
This is a dumb idea. Eaton sells redundant power switch technology, with this USP-RPS requires you to own two battery backup units on main, and your backup. I'd suggest getting a gas generator instead.. higher power to weight ratio.
I know Cisco Systems have done the same thing before because it reminds me of the Cisco Systems' Redundant Power Systems.
Yes. I like your diagram sent to me on redundant power!
Dear @CrosstalkSol
What is the brand of the rack or can you guys recommend good options.
It looks completely fit for the purpose.
I was going to go out out with the lads but the power went down down so I had to stay in in ;)
i wonder what the function is of the Internal USB port inside the USP-RPS
One thing you didn't mention, or test, is that this device CANNOT COLD BOOT a switch or UDM-Pro/SE that has a failed power supply. In other words, if the connected Switch's internal power supply fails and the USP RPS takes over you are fine as long as it doesn't also lose power. However, if the USP RPS subsequently loses power, then you completely lose the switch AND you cannot power it back on using just the RPS. A bit of an oversight on UBNT's part in my opinion but still better than nothing I suppose.
so if your power supply dies and the unit switches to the RPS which is great; but why not make the built in power supply hot swappable as well. That way you can run on the RPS until you can change out the power supply? otherwise you will still have to shut the unit down and replace or wait for an RMA...
The Cat 6 cable tiny inside board is probably a surge protector.
THE U-NVR have access to it also..:) I think the LeaF has too.. and also the cloud key(if the rack mount for cloud key gen 2 works the same way)🤓
As far as the price argument goes, with 6 switches it makes sense. With 1 switch, or 7 switches, that you need RPS on, not so much.
Yea I agree
This channel has taught me so much.Thank you 🙏🏾
Good video but heads up for those watching, Ubiquiti hardware/software is not "Enterprise grade" as he mentioned. Enterprise grade hardware is Aruba, Cisco, Fortinet, Checkpoint, Palo Alto etc.
Absolutely agree
So, I'm confused. Does this only help if the PSU in a switch or UDM dies, but not if there's a power outage? I didn't see any batteries in the case, but was under the impression that this was a type of UPS, which it appears it is not?
So this RPS unit only works with the PRO switches correct. There’s no way to use it with the other rack mount switches that don’t have the Pro name attached?
Do you have any UPS recommendations? Also rack mount or tower, what is your preferance?
Nice video tks! Does anyone can tell me what kind of screws you use in this rack (like the on you use at 5min50s ? I'm searching for a solution with screws you can manipulate without screwdriver :)
Thanks for sharing this. Is there a option to replace with new battery in it?
Michael Huang it doesn’t have a battery. It isn’t a UPS.
Is there a notification if power to the USP unit is interrupted? In my case primary power to switches will be via Cyberpower UPS, and this unifi USP will be backup if the Cyberpower runs out.
is there a recommendation on the UPS that would be needed to battery back up the device? Does it need to be a pure sine wave? what would be an appropriate voltage?
Also what is the tiny camera that has a handle looks good in video quality and audio - link
Well.Thank you. Now I know I have misunderstood RPS with UPS. I should have watched your video earlier.
Like a billion other people said, for REDUNDANT power, they could have just done the "we have two ports but only give you one PSU" thing that literally *everyone else* does. If they're going to make a big-assed rack-mounted piece of gear, they could have at least put a freakin' BATTERY in it!!
It is a very interesting product, BUT, without a battery for UPS type power backup I think it drops a bit short. I could se this, if you had a bit of mone to throw around, as a backup in several network cabinets to ensure the network stays up if there is a blackout keeping things as cameras, network equipment and NVR running. Nah, this is a little bit of a swing and amiss for me unfortunately...
SO does the RPS have a battery so if the power goes out it can still power them or is it strictly only to add another AC method?
Could you liste dowen the maximam power consamtion of each devaice used in data center
I think even tho I only currently have the UDM-Pro that would work with it that I would still buy it. Being that the UDM-Pro is my only router and controller having the power supply fail just once and the RPS there to keep us afloat till I can get a replacement IMHO is worth the money. Also I have a hunch that Ubiquiti only putting this on the Pro versions of the equipment is there trial run to see how it fairs. I’m thinking it may be something we see on all the equipment in the future.
I personally would rather have something like the second PSU being modular. Something you could buy later, slide in, then plug directly into 120v outlet. In those scenarios where switches are not in the same location, but desire redundant power then would potentially make this solution more expensive than competitors.
3:25 - unboxing is my favorite part of your videos. Heehee.
Where did you get the thumbscrews on your rack at 7:52?
i really like the UDM pro ... i just dont like that it does not support miltisites... is there any talk about making multisite support for UDM pro?
So for $550 (with cables) you get 1 redundant power supply to share with 6 devices. And if the RPS goes down, all 6 are unprotected. Do I have this right? If so, no thanks.
Paul Cezanne yes
It still gives you AC redundancy, and the probability of the RPS going down is low. It's inexpensive protection for the AC power supply in each of the devices it's connected to.
dodeca hedron I ordered one, hasn’t arrived yet. I have a DreamMachine Pro and the new 48 port POE switch, both with RPS connectors. I have 2 different circuit breaker panels, one is backed up by a generator. will be using a circuit from each, into a UPS, then one to the AC supplies, the other to the RPS.. That’s plenty of redudancy for me. Pretty much guarantees power to the network until generator runs out of fuel (has a 1,000 gallon underground propane tank, not too likely unless it’s the Zombie Apocolypse, then we have bigger issues)
What is the 4-post rack with caster that you have? Seems like a nice simple rack and I'm in the market for one for my home network.
Hi can you confirm something for me on the RPS... the fans never come on....even if manually ramped up on the touchpad to 100% . Can you see if yours works.