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I'm assuming you measured hot to neutral, and didn't find any transients.
Did you put your oscilloscope on hot to ground as well? A faulty ground could cause what you are seeing.
Do you have any CFL bulbs anywhere in your house? I once had a dead CFL bulb in a fixture in my basement. Anytime I turned on my basement light, every LED lamp in the house would strobe.
I tested live to ground, live to neutral, both in and out of the UPS, and I couldn't see anything out of the ordinary.
The input signal isn't a clean sine wave but it's not dirty either, I'd say it's sine with some extra harmonics and a little bit of noise. There were no sudden peaks or meaningful variations even while the UPS was switching furiously.
I don't have CFL bulbs, only LEDs. I can't think of anything else that could be causing interference. I'll try contacting the power company as suggested by @glimse@lemmy.world
Thanks for all the replies.
Just for shits and grind, how about neutral to ground? They should be bonded together in the breaker box (and nowhere else), but if there is a fault, you might see some significant potential across them.
You've tried different outlets?
From neutral to ground there seems to be just some noise and a bit of DC.
Yes, I tried different outlets, doesn't make a difference. I checked the wiring inside the plug too, the connection seems solid.