I have no experience with Aurender products, but **if** the drive can be removed without too much difficulty, and without breaking any seals that might invalidate the warranty, you might want to consider the following approach. Which would be much less expensive than purchasing a good UPS, and would avoid the possibility of introducing RFI into the system. (I can tell you that some and perhaps many UPS devices, including some that are described as generating pure sine waves, can generate potentially significant amounts of RFI). This approach would also allow you to restore the software to a replacement drive, should the drive ever fail outright.
Purchase a drive docking station, such as this one ($23). Also purchase a drive imaging program. If you have a Windows-based computer I recommend Terabyte Unlimited’s Image for Windows program ($39), which I have used for many years to create images of the "C" drives in all of my computers. (Although that program runs on Windows it can create and restore images of drives that are in pretty much any format, including the Linux formats).
You would then remove the drive from the unit and insert it into the docking station, which in turn would be connected to a USB port on the computer. You could then create an image of the entire drive, save it on your computer, and restore it to the drive (or a replacement drive) via the docking station if and when that ever becomes necessary.
Total cost $62, with the added advantages vs. a UPS that I cited. The downsides are that a little time would be required for familiarization with the imaging program (although its default settings should work fine), and the need to remove and replace the drive in the unit.
Regards,
-- Al
Purchase a drive docking station, such as this one ($23). Also purchase a drive imaging program. If you have a Windows-based computer I recommend Terabyte Unlimited’s Image for Windows program ($39), which I have used for many years to create images of the "C" drives in all of my computers. (Although that program runs on Windows it can create and restore images of drives that are in pretty much any format, including the Linux formats).
You would then remove the drive from the unit and insert it into the docking station, which in turn would be connected to a USB port on the computer. You could then create an image of the entire drive, save it on your computer, and restore it to the drive (or a replacement drive) via the docking station if and when that ever becomes necessary.
Total cost $62, with the added advantages vs. a UPS that I cited. The downsides are that a little time would be required for familiarization with the imaging program (although its default settings should work fine), and the need to remove and replace the drive in the unit.
Regards,
-- Al