most outlets are rated to 15A right? shouldn't need anything special unless we plan to run other heavy loads simultaneously

 

 

On 2014-09-01 21:30, David Keenan wrote:

The commercial models do, yes - draw seems high.. ~14A). We will prolly need some elec work done too, though the models seem like 120V (standard).

On Monday, September 1, 2014, Charley Sheets <rcsheets@acm.org> wrote:

On Mon, 1 Sep 2014 16:30:36 -0700
yar <yardenack@gmail.com> wrote:

> ** Option 1: ~$8000 for a fully-certified, professionally installed
> new commercial lift including all permitting.
> ** Option 2: Failing the passage of option 1, that we authorize up to
> $3500 for a used chairlift. Note most used chairlifts are from houses
> and certified only for residential, not commercial, and therefore a
> used lift may not be technically to ADA code. A UPS (uninterruptable
> power supply) may need to be acquired to power a residential lift in
> the case of a power outage (as per ADA code for commercial spaces.)

Does the commercial lift include some kind of built-in power
redundancy, or would it also require a UPS?

In either case, what's the expected power draw?

--
Charley Sheets

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