flash storage is the most vulnerable in case of power surges
i have a ups, its like sine something idk, it cleans shit out so it cannot surge
Thinking a UPS protects your flash drive is foolish. That UPS protects the PC only. All it takes is a single static discharge to fry the data on your flash drive. Not to mention the USB port it's plugged into could go wonky and send out a spike, or as someone else points out the PSU could fail and spike. A flash drive is a single point of failure, if there's anything important on it then either have another copy or be prepared for grief and it's not if but when.
most decent psu have internal stuff in them to prevent spikes from getting in and out from them if they fail, i think they called
(OCP) Over-Current Protection Over-current protection (OCP) is a popular protection found in all PSUs with multiple +12V rails, and in most cases, it also protects the minor rails. OCP kicks in when the current in the rails surpasses a certain limit.
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Over Current / Voltage / Temperature / Power Protection, Under Voltage Protection and Short Circuit Protection
thats the protection for my rosewill photon 750
plus it is getting very clean power from my ups.
my power is a little sketchy here, but has gotten better. my lights will flicker sometimes but i have no worries
and i aint all in there brushing it off, lol. i use low compressed air from a distance, there usually not much cause my case has filters on every opening.
My CPU is a neural-net processor. A learning computer.
Overcurrent protection will shut the voltage rail off if it detects too much current being drawn from the device. This is to protect the regulators from damage. USB ports usually have something similar, they will shut down power if too much is drawn from the port. It just shuts the device off and you usually have to power cycle to reset it. If you have this happen often, you've undersized your supply or it's old, dirty, overheating, or a combination of the three.
The voltage input of a power supply is able to tolerate quite a bit of fluctuation, 100-240VAC is not uncommon these days. If you're in the USA then you're probably never going to see >140VAC on your normal household line. The power supply doesn't give a shit, modern switchers are tolerant by design. It's really high voltage, like lightning, that will still do them in.
A UPS protects from brownouts (<100VAC) or complete failures, and is merely designed to give you some time to shut down safely. Not all UPSes are the same, some provide clean power from the batteries (the output is always run on the inverter,) some just try to switch and hope for the best.
Yes all of this is good, but HW fails to do what its supposed to do all of the time. And there are lots of other reasons why a flash drive might go south, static electricity for example. Presumably your data is important, I can only hope that you have back up copies.
Ask me about the top end UPS we had installed on a server that we tested monthly and everything appeared A-1. And then one weekend the power went out and the UPS didn't kick in. There were 7 VMs on that server, 3 of which were critical.
But if your PSU fails, it might fail overvoltage.
A good power supply should shut itself off, if it detects overvoltage.
Also, quality computer parts are supposed to interrupt the circuit if they detect an inappropriate voltage, like mobile phones do.
But at some point, overvoltage always leads to failiure.
i didnt think of that,
Great.
Of course, one can install protective devices.
But many people don't.
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