Power Event Definitions, Causes, and Effects
-
Also known as brownouts, sags are short term decreases in voltage levels. This is the most common power problem, accounting for 87% of all power disturbances according to a study by Bell Labs.
- CAUSE -
Typically caused by the start-up power demands of many electrical devices (including motors, compressors, elevators, shop tools, etc.), sags are also the electric utilities' means of coping with extraordinary power demands. In a procedure known as "rolling brownouts," the utility will systematically lower voltage levels in certain areas for hours or days at a time. Hot Summer days, when air conditioning requirements are at their peak, will often prompt rolling brownouts.
- EFFECT -
A sag can "starve" a computer of the
power it needs to function, causing frozen keyboards and unexpected system crashes with the end result being the loss or corruption of data. Sags also reduce the efficiency and life span of electrical equipment, particularly motors.
-
Total loss of utility power.
- CAUSE -
Excessive demand on the power grid, lightning storms, ice on power lines, car accidents, backhoes, earthquakes, etc.
- EFFECT -
Loss of current work in RAM or cache, possible loss of hard drive File Allocation Table (FAT) resulting in total loss of data stored on drive.
-
Also referred to as an impulse, a spike is an instantaneous, dramatic increase in voltage. Akin to the force of a tidal wave, a spike can enter electronic equipment through AC, network serial or phone lines and damage or completely destroy components.
- CAUSE -
Typically caused by a nearby lightning strike, spikes can also occur when utility power comes back on line after having been knocked out in a storm or as the result of a car accident.
- EFFECT -
Catastrophic damage to hardware. Loss of data.
-
A short term increase in voltage, typically lasting at least 1/120 of a second.
- CAUSE -
High-powered electrical motors, such as air conditioners, and household appliances in the vicinity. When this equipment is switched off, the extra voltage is dissipated through the power line.
- EFFECT -
Computers and similar sensitive electronic devices are designed to receive power within a certain voltage range. Anything outside of expected peak and RMS (considered the "average" voltage) levels will stress delicate components and cause premature failure.
-
More technically referred to as Electro-Magnetic Interference (EMI) and Radio Frequency Interference (RFI), electrical noise disrupts the smooth sine wave one expects from utility power.
- CAUSE -
Electrical noise is caused by many factors and phenomena, including lightning, load switching, generators, radio transmitters and industrial equipment. It may be intermittent or chronic.
- EFFECT -
Noise introduces glitches and errors into executable programs and data files.