Controlled Power Cycle is a planned restart of equipment in the correct order to restore operation without disrupting the rest of the system.
Example of Controlled Power Cycle
A centralized rack can organize the control processor, network switch, video matrix, amplifiers, power conditioning, and labeled cabling in one serviceable location. In that kind of Davis rack and power project, the term Controlled Power Cycle would describe a planned restart of equipment in the correct order to restore operation without disrupting the rest of the system. Davis would use that understanding to account for rack layout, ventilation, cable management, surge protection, UPS needs, and service labeling, then test the result in the actual room, document the related components, and show the client how to use the feature without needing to manage the technical details behind it.
Related Terms
Frequently Asked Question
What does Controlled Power Cycle mean?
Controlled Power Cycle means a planned restart of equipment in the correct order to restore operation without disrupting the rest of the system. In a Davis Audio & Video project, it matters because the goal is not just adding technology; it is making the system understandable, reliable, and easy to operate.
