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A battery cabinet houses and protects the batteries that supply stored energy to a UPS system. It ensures that backup power is readily available whenever primary power is interrupted. Battery cabinets can be installed indoors or outdoors and are designed to provide secure, organized, and scalable energy storage for continuous power delivery.
Global Power Supply provides a full range of battery cabinets engineered to extend UPS runtime, protect sensitive loads, and maintain continuity in any environment. A UPS system provides immediate backup power during an outage. Paired with compatible UPS battery cabinets, your facility gains extended power capacity and greater resilience.
Global Power Supply offers battery cabinets from industry-leading manufacturers such as Toshiba and Narada, available in multiple configurations to match your specific operational needs. Because every facility’s power requirements are unique, we can help tailor the number of cabinets, capacity, and layout to meet your space and runtime objectives.
Battery cabinets can be installed indoors or outdoors and are designed to provide secure, organized, and scalable energy storage for continuous power delivery. Industries such as data centers, healthcare, and manufacturing depend on UPS battery cabinets to safeguard operations, protect sensitive equipment, and maintain uptime.
Tskhinvali Railway Station was a railway terminal in the capital of South Ossetia. Until 1991, it was the end station of the 33-kilometer line of the Transcaucasian Railway from the station in Gori.
Tskhinvali[a] or Tskhinval, [b] occasionally called Stalinir during specific contexts, is the capital of the disputed de facto independent Republic of South Ossetia, internationally considered part of Shida Kartli, Georgia (except by Russia and four other UN member states).
Tskhinvali was annexed to the Russian Empire along with the rest of eastern Georgia in 1801. Located on a trade route which linked North Caucasus to Tbilisi and Gori, Tskhinvali gradually developed into a commercial town with a mixed Georgian Jewish, Georgian, Armenian and Ossetian population.
The name of Tskhinvali is derived from the Old Georgian Krtskhinvali (Georgian: ქრცხინვალი), from earlier Krtskhilvani (Georgian: ქრცხილვანი), literally meaning "the land of hornbeams ", which is the historical name of the city. See ცხინვალი for more.