9 min read
You have found a UPS that looks right on paper, but the datasheet is full of numbers — 3000 VA, 2700 W, PF 0.9, THD<3%, input voltage window 176–264 V. What does any of this actually mean? This article decodes every key specification you will encounter on a UPS datasheet, explains why each one matters for your equipment, and gives you a calculator to translate specs into a purchasing decision.
Reading a real datasheet — annotated walkthrough
Below is a representative UPS datasheet for a 3000 VA On-Line unit. Click any row to see a plain-English explanation of what that specification means and what to look for when comparing models.
VA vs watts — the most misunderstood distinction
The single most common mistake in UPS sizing is confusing VA (volt-amperes) with watts. They measure different things, and conflating them leads to either an undersized UPS that trips under load, or an oversized one that wastes money.
Watts (W) measure real power — the energy actually consumed and converted into work (heat, light, computation). This is what your electricity meter counts and what appears on your equipment's power consumption sticker.
VA (volt-amperes) measure apparent power — the total electrical demand placed on the supply, including reactive components that are drawn from the supply but returned unused. The UPS must be rated to handle this total demand, not just the consumed portion.
Power factor — what it is and why it shifts
Power factor (PF) is the ratio of real power to apparent power, expressed as a number between 0 and 1. A PF of 1.0 means all the power drawn from the supply is doing useful work — nothing is wasted on reactive current. A PF of 0.8 means only 80% of drawn power is actually consumed; the remaining 20% is reactive.
Modern IT equipment — servers, workstations, network gear — typically has a power factor of 0.95–0.99 due to active power factor correction (APFC) built into their switch-mode power supplies. Older equipment, motors, and fluorescent lighting tend to have lower PF values (0.7–0.85).
UPS datasheets list two power factor figures: the output PF (the PF the UPS assumes when converting VA to W in its own spec) and occasionally the input PF (how efficiently the UPS itself draws from the mains). A higher output PF means you get more usable watts per VA of rated capacity.
THD — output waveform quality explained
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) measures how closely the UPS output voltage waveform resembles a perfect sine wave. A pure sine wave has 0% THD. Any deviation — steps, spikes, flat-tops — adds harmonic content that can cause problems for sensitive equipment.
The waveform your equipment receives depends directly on UPS topology. Select a topology below to see what its output waveform looks like and what THD level to expect:
For most IT equipment (servers, workstations, network gear), a THD below 5% causes no issues. Medical equipment, precision instruments, and audio equipment may require THD below 3% or even 2%. Check your equipment manufacturer's requirements before selecting a UPS topology.
Input voltage window — how much grid variation the UPS tolerates
The input voltage window (also called the input voltage range or AVR range) specifies how wide a range of incoming mains voltage the UPS can accept and regulate without switching to battery. A wider window means the UPS relies on its battery less frequently, which extends battery service life.
A typical On-Line UPS might accept 110–300 V input and deliver a stable 220/230/240 V output regardless. A Line-Interactive unit's AVR might compensate within ±15–25% of nominal before switching to battery. Off-Line units usually have a tighter window of ±10%.
Runtime — why the datasheet number is almost always wrong for you
UPS datasheets quote runtime figures at specific load percentages — typically 100%, 75%, and 50% of rated capacity. These numbers are measured under controlled lab conditions with a fully charged, new battery at 25°C. In practice, your actual runtime will differ because:
Your actual load is probably not the same as the test load. Runtime increases non-linearly as load decreases. A UPS rated for 5 minutes at 100% load might deliver 18 minutes at 50% load — not 10 minutes, because batteries deliver more total energy at lower discharge rates.
Battery age and temperature matter enormously. A lead-acid battery at 35°C has roughly 80% of its 25°C capacity. At 40°C, capacity drops to around 65%. A battery aged 3 years may retain only 70–80% of its original capacity even if it has never been deep-discharged.
The extended battery module (EBM) option. Many UPS models support external battery cabinets that multiply runtime. If your runtime requirement exceeds what the internal battery provides, look for UPS models that support EBM connection rather than buying a much larger UPS.
UPS sizing calculator
Enter your load details below. The calculator works out the minimum UPS specifications you need and flags any issues.
Quick-reference: every spec at a glance
A summary of every specification you will encounter on a UPS datasheet, with the key rule for each one: