A 160kVA Delphys Elite UPS system has been installed in a state-of-the-art catheter laboratory at Cheltenham General Hospital to ensure total power continuity to its new Innova 2100 equipment

One of Socomec Sicon’s 160kVA Delphys Elite UPS Systems has been installed in a state-of-the-art catheter laboratory at Cheltenham General Hospital to ensure total power continuity to its new Innova 2100 equipment. Innova provides surgeons with high resolution digital images while they perform angioplasty and cartoid stenting, with digital subtracted angiography (DSA), and a wide variety of other peripheral procedures.

It is essential to have an uninterrupted power supply, and particularly through a critical seven minute period during procedures, when power loss would leave the surgeon blind to the position of the catheter within the artery.

The Delphys Elite, which was specified by Engineering Services Design Practice of Redditch, offers the ideal solution for medical applications providing a reliable and secure power supply.

It was one of the first UPS systems to feature an IGBT rectifier for extremely low harmonic re-injection, a THDi of less than 3% (without filters) and a power factor (PF) 0.99.

This ensures it will not interfere with the integrity of sensitive equipment.

The Delphys Elite family includes three phase modules covering six power ratings ranging from 60 to 200kVA.

It complies with IEC61000-3-4, performs to IEC62040-3 EMC meets EN50091-2 and IEC62040-2 and complied with safety standards EN50091-1-2 and IEC62040-1-2.

Until two years ago, all Gloucestershire patients requiring angioplasty - a medical procedure in which a balloon is used to open narrowed or blocked blood vessels of the heart - had to travel to hospitals in Oxford or Bristol for treatment.

The new GBP 1 million lab has already started treating its first patients and the trust’s cardiac team hopes the second laboratory will now enable them to perform as many as 350-400 angioplasty procedures a year.