What's new

asus ac68u router voltage

  • SNBForums Code of Conduct

    SNBForums is a community for everyone, no matter what their level of experience.

    Please be tolerant and patient of others, especially newcomers. We are all here to share and learn!

    The rules are simple: Be patient, be nice, be helpful or be gone!

This is what I am talking about . This type of the ups we have here in my country < the problem it doesn't have a 19 volt outlet to operate the router I want to have.
So what is the make and model of the 850 VA UPS you were talking about in post #9? Do you already own this UPS?
 
forget it - not usable with this more power hungry router!
It is 1A only @24V and you would need about 1,75A or in other words limited to 24W, your router needs 1,75A x 19V=33W.
 
forget it - not usable with this more power hungry router!
It is 1A only @24V and you would need about 1,75A or in other words limited to 24W, your router needs 1,75A x 19V=33W.

Yes, It is only POE 36W. you mean this ups is useless because the router need more energy. in addition the nano also need power . What is the other solutions ?
 
Last edited:
yes I can , but the normal ups doesn't last for a long time just an hour or less

It all depends on what capacity battery the UPS has. The router's normal power consumption is about 15W or less. A normal UPS is more universal, you can use it to protect other devices too. Keep in mind UPS is not a power source. It's a protection device to supply power in short power interruption periods and to allow sufficient time for electronics to shut down properly. Batteries in UPS devices work in a heavy duty cycle and if you drain them completely and recharge often they won't last for very long.
 
SC-DC6S is rated 12000mAh or 12Ah with a lithium battery which means about 3V.
12Ah means it can give 1A for 12 hours, or 0.5A for 24 hours, something like that rated with 3V output.

So 12Ah @3V means 36Wh (watts for one hour, or less watts for more hours).
Your router usually will run with roughly 15W (1.75A x 19V=33W is maximum for short time while powering up), this SC-DC6S will last about 2 hours while SC-DC3S only 1 hour.

You will find this line: Output interface:2*USB/5V-2A,5V-2A,9V 2A,12V 2A,19V 2A,24V 1A; B25

So it should be fine for your router only for less than 2 hours.

EDIT: system voltage is 12V not 3V as I thought, so it will last 3 times longer! (thanks to Colin Taylor)
 
Last edited:
SC-DC6S is rated 12000mAh or 12Ah with a lithium battery which means about 3V.
12Ah means it can give 1A for 12 hours, or 0.5A for 24 hours, something like that.

So 12Ah @3V means 36Wh (watts for one hour, or less watts for more hours).
Your router usually will run with roughly 15W, this SC-DC6S will last about 2 hours while SC-DC3S only 1 hour.

But it as well says: Discharging Current: 2A what will possibly be the maximum value!!!
That means 2A @3V but you need 1,5A @ 19V which means it will discharge with 19V/3V=6 times more ampere.
So you would need 1.5A x 6 = 9A discharge current on the batteries.
That one might not deliver that much as it is rated with 2A!
The specs say that it has a system voltage of 11.1v with is consistent with 3 18650 lithium batteries. So that's 11.1 x 12Ah = 133.3Wh. Assuming his router only draws the 1A allowed by the port (rather than the maximum 1.75A required by the router) then it would last 133.3Wh/19W = 7 hours. Although probably more like 4 or 5 after accounting for losses (assuming nothing else is plugged into the UPS).
 
The specs say that it has a system voltage of 11.1v with is consistent with 3 18650 lithium batteries. So that's 11.1 x 12Ah = 133.3Wh. Assuming his router only draws the 1A allowed by the port (rather than the maximum 1.75A required by the router) then it would last 133.3Wh/19W = 7 hours. Although probably more like 4 or 5 after accounting for losses (assuming nothing else is plugged into the UPS).

so what do you think the asus ac68u can work on 19V 1 A in this ups or not ?
https://www.alibaba.com/product-det...pm=a2700.7724857.normalList.80.2d26655bTw6BdH
 
SC-DC6S is rated 12000mAh or 12Ah with a lithium battery which means about 3V.
12Ah means it can give 1A for 12 hours, or 0.5A for 24 hours, something like that rated with 3V output.

So 12Ah @3V means 36Wh (watts for one hour, or less watts for more hours).
Your router usually will run with roughly 15W (1.75A x 19V=33W is maximum for short time while powering up), this SC-DC6S will last about 2 hours while SC-DC3S only 1 hour.

You will find this line: Output interface:2*USB/5V-2A,5V-2A,9V 2A,12V 2A,19V 2A,24V 1A; B25

So it should be fine for your router only for less than 2 hours.

What do you mean by this ( SC-DC6S) ?
 
@ColinTaylor: thanks for correction, didnt see this line system voltage, only that they use Battery type:18650 Rechargeable lithium battery

Your link offers 2 different sizes!
Spacifications:
Model : SC-DC3S and SC-DC6S
Capacity: 6000mAh and 12000mAh

The pictures are DIFFERENT to what they write in specs!!!
Picture only 19V@1A while spec says 19V@2A

I refered to specs while Colin Taylor refered to pictures ... the truth might be somewhere in between.
Or the smaller one will give you only 1A and the larger even 2A - who knows - its chinese!
 
Last edited:
SC-DC6S is rated 12000mAh or 12Ah with a lithium battery which means about 3V.

Li-Ion cells are usually around 3.6V-4.2V depending on chemistry and charge levels, but the main problem is we can't trust Chinese no-name manufacturers about capacity. What is listed as 12000mAh may be way less than that as real capacity.
 
The specs say that it has a system voltage of 11.1v with is consistent with 3 18650 lithium batteries. So that's 11.1 x 12Ah = 133.3Wh

3 x 18650 in series gives you about 2200mAh (1800-2800 depending on cells used), or the maximum capacity of a single cell, just with higher voltage.
 

Latest threads

Support SNBForums w/ Amazon

If you'd like to support SNBForums, just use this link and buy anything on Amazon. Thanks!

Sign Up For SNBForums Daily Digest

Get an update of what's new every day delivered to your mailbox. Sign up here!

Staff online

Top