it's not dirty or unclean power anymore, it's straight filthy
Did you by chance check your outlet (and service panel) ground to Earth ground? My mains waveform is not exactly picture perfect by any means, but I would not call it filthy. However, a bad Earth ground can certainly result in a very dirty waveform.
This confirms for me that an induction motor can't always start itself on a modified square wave.
Okay. But so?
I mean does that suggest a
good stepped approximation UPS with AVR cannot support a computer? Nope. Or that it will not support the OP's setup? Nope.
Does it suggest everyone who has been using a
good stepped approximation UPS on their systems
successfully all these years all need to dump them and run out and buy new pure sinewave UPS? Nope.
And how often to you need to "start" a large motor during a power outage? And what is the current rating of this heating pump induction motor? Looking at some of the specs for some motors, I'm seeing many 1.3HP motors - with many considerably more demanding than that. That 1.3HP variable has specs of 230VAC 8.6A and 115VAC 15.6A. That equates to 1,483.5W and 1,345.5W respectively (assuming a PF of .75). You cannot get that kind of power support from any typical consumer UPS. Yes, I could have picked smaller motors, but I could have easily picked much larger (hungrier) too. Depend on the size of the home and furnace.
Frankly, if you want to support your furnace and have heat for your home during extended power outages, you should be looking into backup generators. Not an UPS.
I think it important to remind everyone again that the waveform output from an UPS - regardless if stepped approximation or pure sinewave -
ONLY comes into play when there is a total power outage and the UPS is providing backup power. At ALL OTHER TIMES, the waveform being sent to the connected components is the exact same (or
slightly regulated by the AVR feature) as the waveform coming out of the wall.
How often during the last 30 days did you lose power? How long was it out?
If you lose power for 1 hour in a month, that is still just 1 hour out of 720 hours, or .13% of the time. That is
point one three. And frankly, 1 hour per month is definitely atypical.
Again, the purpose of a
good UPS is to
maintain power during a power outage long enough to finish typing your sentence, then "gracefully" save your file, exit your running programs, shutdown Windows, then power off your computer. That should take 5 - 10 minutes. Not an hour. The purpose of a UPS is NOT so you can keep playing your games for extended periods of time, or to start up heater motors.
Oh, one more thing.
OF COURSE, it is important to buy a quality UPS with AVR. No one is suggesting buying a cheap, entry level UPS just as we should always buy quality power supplies for our computers. That SHOULD go without saying. With that in mind, just for an example, since EVGA and Seasonic supplies are often recommended,
Q: Do
EVGA Power Supplies support UPS backup devices that support Line-Interactive AVR UPS which uses a simulated/artificial sine wave?
A: Yes, all EVGA power supplies support Active PFC and UPS backup devices.
Seasonic recommends pure sinewave UPS, but also clearly says,
a high quality simulated sinewave UPS from a reputable manufacturer could also be a possible solution to be used with our power supplies.