Re: rack power question

2008-04-05 Thread Barton F Bruce
A close second might be liquid cooled air tight cabinets with the air/water heat exchangers (redundant pair) at the bottom where leaks are less of an issue (drip tray, anyone? :) )... Something like what you suggest has been around for a year or two now, though using liquid CO2 as the coola

Re: rack power question

2008-04-03 Thread Robert Boyle
At 03:50 PM 4/3/2008, Derek J. Balling wrote: So your theoretical maximum draw is NOT "1/2 the total"... in a nicely populated chassis it will draw more than 1/2 the total and complain the whole time about it. That should probably have read in a well designed and fully populated chassis... I

Re: rack power question

2008-04-03 Thread Derek J. Balling
Sorry to resurrect a slightly old thread, but I did want to touch on something I noticed while catching up. On Mar 25, 2008, at 6:12 PM, Michael Brown wrote: Naturally, that's redundant, so theoretical maximum usage per rack is half that, 23200W. Plus, the blades available today don't draw e

Re: rack power question

2008-03-31 Thread MARLON BORBA
Do not forget physical security (including, but not limited to, access control & surveillance -- different logs, videos, and people to control), local/municipal/state laws and regulations (e.g. fire control standards), personnel to manage all that sites (even third-party)... IMHO too much admi

Re: rack power question

2008-03-30 Thread vijay gill
On Sun, Mar 23, 2008 at 2:15 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Given that power and HVAC are such key issues in building > big datacenters, and that fiber to the office is now a reality > virtually everywhere, one wonders why someone doesn't start > building out distributed data centers. Essentia

Re: rack power question

2008-03-26 Thread Tony Finch
On Tue, 25 Mar 2008, Dorn Hetzel wrote: > > A close second might be liquid cooled air tight cabinets with the air/water > heat exchangers (redundant pair) at the bottom where leaks are less of an > issue (drip tray, anyone? :) )... Something like what you suggest has been around for a year or two

Re: rack power question

2008-03-26 Thread Petri Helenius
Dorn Hetzel wrote: I believe some of the calculations for hole/trench sizing per ton used for geothermal exchange heating/cooling applications rely on the seasonal nature of heating/cooling. I have heard that if you either heat or cool on a continuous permanent basis, year-round, then you ne

Re: rack power question

2008-03-26 Thread Dorn Hetzel
I believe some of the calculations for hole/trench sizing per ton used for geothermal exchange heating/cooling applications rely on the seasonal nature of heating/cooling. I have heard that if you either heat or cool on a continuous permanent basis, year-round, then you need to allow for more hole

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Petri Helenius
Paul Vixie wrote: aside from the corrosive nature of the salt and other minerals, there is an unbelievable maze of permits from various layers of government since there's a protected marshland as well as habitat restoration within a few miles. i think it's safe to say that Sun Quentin could no

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Paul Vixie
> > i'm too close to san francisco bay. > > Why is that bad? I thought ground-source HVAC systems worked better if > the ground was saturated with water. Better thermal conductivity than > dry soil. aside from the corrosive nature of the salt and other minerals, there is an unbelievable maze of

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread William Herrin
On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 5:00 PM, Paul Vixie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Have you made any calculations if geo-cooling makes sense in your region to > > fill in the hottest summer months or is drilling just too expensive for the > > return? > > i'm too close to san francisco bay. Paul, W

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Paul Vixie
> Have you made any calculations if geo-cooling makes sense in your region to > fill in the hottest summer months or is drilling just too expensive for the > return? i'm too close to san francisco bay.

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Petri Helenius
Paul Vixie wrote: this is a strict business decision involving sustainability and TCO. if it takes one watt of mechanical to transfer heat away from every watt delivered, whereas ambient air with good-enough filtration will let one watt of roof fan transfer the heat away from five delivered wa

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Michael Holstein
Mineral oil? I'm not sure about the non-flammable part though. Not all oils burn but I'm not sure if mineral oil is one of them. It is used for immersion cooling though. It burns quite well .. http://video.aol.com/video-detail/transformer-explosion/1599831229 Cheers, Michael Holstein

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Deepak Jain
There are vendors working on this, but the point here is that unlike the medical, automotive or aerospace industries Computing (in general) platforms aren't regulated the same way... you won't see random gear hanging off the inside of an MRI (in general), or in an airplane, etc. Compute

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Alexander Harrowell
We'll need non-returns in there as well, to limit the maximum possible spillage. More seriously, the energy-efficiency community has a whole design approach for industrial facilities called "Factor 10 Engineering" which is about saving heat or cooling by using the shortest, straightest, fattest pip

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread chuck goolsbee
i am vexed at the moment by the filtration costs. What is it that is clogging your filters? Dust? Pollen? Small animals?? We're in a similar situation to you, though even better as we're blessed by even cooler ambients and never see 100°F, or even close to it. So we're using make-up air 12

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Leigh Porter
Joel Jaeggli wrote: > > Brian Raaen wrote: >> Russia (or the USSR at that time) used to use liquid graphite to cool >> their nuclear reactors, even thought it was flammable of course >> that was what they were using in Chernobyl. > > This has diverged far enough that it's now off the topic of

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread paul
forwarded with permission. > From: "Bob Bradlee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "Paul Vixie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2008 11:16:17 -0400 > X-Mailer: PMMail 2000 Professional (2.20.2717) For Windows 2000 (5.1.2600;2) > Subject: Re: rack po

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Joel Jaeggli
Brian Raaen wrote: Russia (or the USSR at that time) used to use liquid graphite to cool their nuclear reactors, even thought it was flammable of course that was what they were using in Chernobyl. This has diverged far enough that it's now off the topic of cooling. The melting point of

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread michael.dillon
> Or perhaps some non-conductive working fluid instead of water. > That might not carry quite as much heat as water, but it would surely > carry more than air and if chosen correctly would have more benign results > when the inevitable leaks and spills occur. HCFC-123 is likely what w

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Paul Vixie
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Adrian Chadd) writes: > This thread begs a question - how much do you think it'd be worth to do > things more efficiently? this is a strict business decision involving sustainability and TCO. if it takes one watt of mechanical to transfer heat away from every watt delivered,

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Ray Burkholder
Dorn Hetzel wrote: > Of course, my chemistry is a little rusty, so I'm not sure about the > prospects for a non-toxic, non-flammable, non-conductive substance > with workable fluid flow and heat transfer properties :) For some of us over-the-edge pc enthusiasts, we use a non-conductive heat transf

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Marshall Eubanks
On Mar 25, 2008, at 11:15 AM, Brian Raaen wrote: Russia (or the USSR at that time) used to use liquid graphite to cool their nuclear reactors, even thought it was flammable of course that was what they were using in Chernobyl. The RBMK-1000 used graphite for moderation and water fo

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Ryan Otis
. (-100degC to 130degC) -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris Adams Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2008 6:38 AM To: nanog list Subject: Re: rack power question Once upon a time, Dorn Hetzel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > Of course, my chemi

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Alexander Harrowell
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of > Justin Shore > Sent: 25 March 2008 14:20 > To: Dorn Hetzel > Cc: nanog list > Subject: Re: rack power question > > > Dorn Hetzel wrote: > > Of course, my chemistry is a little rusty, so I'm not sure about the > > p

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Brian Raaen
Russia (or the USSR at that time) used to use liquid graphite to cool their nuclear reactors, even thought it was flammable of course that was what they were using in Chernobyl. -- Brian Raaen Network Engineer [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Tuesday 25 March 2008, you wrote: > > Dorn Hetzel wrote

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Alex Rubenstein
] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of > Justin Shore > Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2008 10:20 AM > To: Dorn Hetzel > Cc: nanog list > Subject: Re: rack power question > > > Dorn Hetzel wrote: > > Of course, my chemistry is a little rusty, so I'm not sure about th

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Patrick Shoemaker
Joe Abley wrote: On 25 Mar 2008, at 09:11 , Dorn Hetzel wrote: It would sure be nice if along with choosing to order servers with DC or AC power inputs one could choose air or water cooling. Or perhaps some non-conductive working fluid instead of water. That might not carry quite as much

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Ben Butler
While it has the potential to catch fire - it does however work fine in my car engine. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Justin Shore Sent: 25 March 2008 14:20 To: Dorn Hetzel Cc: nanog list Subject: Re: rack power question Dorn Hetzel

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Justin Shore
Dorn Hetzel wrote: Of course, my chemistry is a little rusty, so I'm not sure about the prospects for a non-toxic, non-flammable, non-conductive substance with workable fluid flow and heat transfer properties :) Mineral oil? I'm not sure about the non-flammable part though. Not all oils bu

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Joe Abley
On 25 Mar 2008, at 09:11 , Dorn Hetzel wrote: It would sure be nice if along with choosing to order servers with DC or AC power inputs one could choose air or water cooling. Or perhaps some non-conductive working fluid instead of water. That might not carry quite as much heat as water, b

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Paul Vixie
Matthew Crocker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Seal off the room so you can control your replacement air source. Put a > series of cyclone dust collectors (think huge Dyson Vacuum) on your inbound > air. > > http://www.proventilation.com/products/ProductsView.asp?page=1&gclid=CKyD04SRqJICFQUilgod

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread John Lee
behalf of Paul Vixie Sent: Tue 3/25/2008 2:17 AM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: rack power question this has been, to me, one of the most fascinating nanog threads in years. at the moment my own datacenter problem is filtration. isc lives in a place where outside air is quite cool enough for

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Chris Adams
Once upon a time, Dorn Hetzel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > Of course, my chemistry is a little rusty, so I'm not sure about the > prospects for a non-toxic, non-flammable, non-conductive substance with > workable fluid flow and heat transfer properties :) Fluorinert - it worked (more or less) for

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Dorn Hetzel
It would sure be nice if along with choosing to order servers with DC or AC power inputs one could choose air or water cooling. Or perhaps some non-conductive working fluid instead of water. That might not carry quite as much heat as water, but it would surely carry more than air and if chosen co

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Alexander Harrowell
A valve in the connector; has to be pushed in by the other connector to let the water flow. Water pressure pushes it shut otherwise so it fails-safe. On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 12:35 PM, Leigh Porter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > That would be pretty good. But seeing some of the disastrous cabling

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Leigh Porter
That would be pretty good. But seeing some of the disastrous cabling situations it'd have to be made pretty idiot proof. Nice double sealed idiot proof piping with self-sealing ends.. -- Leigh -- Leigh Alexander Harrowell wrote: > I still think the industry needs to standardise water cooling

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Alexander Harrowell
I still think the industry needs to standardise water cooling to popularise it; if there were two water ports on all the pizzaboxes next to the RJ45s, and a standard set of flexible pipes, how many people would start using it? There's probably a medical, automotive or aerospace standard out there.

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Leigh Porter
$5 Adrian Chadd wrote: This thread begs a question - how much do you think it'd be worth to do things more efficiently? Adrian

Re: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread Adrian Chadd
This thread begs a question - how much do you think it'd be worth to do things more efficiently? Adrian

RE: rack power question

2008-03-25 Thread michael.dillon
> what kind of automation can i deploy that will > precipitate the particulates so that air can move (for > cooling) and so that air won't bring grit (which is conductive)? Have you considered a two-step process using water in the first step to remove particulates (water spray perhaps?) and the

Re: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Paul Vixie
this has been, to me, one of the most fascinating nanog threads in years. at the moment my own datacenter problem is filtration. isc lives in a place where outside air is quite cool enough for server inlet seven or more months out of the year. we've also got quite high ceilings. a 2HP roof fan

RE: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Frank Bulk - iNAME
arch 24, 2008 10:27 PM Cc: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: rack power question While I enjoy hand waving as much as the next guy... reading over this thread, there are several definitions of sq ft (ft^2) here and folks are interchanging their uses whether aware of it or not. 1) sq ft = the amount o

Re: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Deepak Jain
While I enjoy hand waving as much as the next guy... reading over this thread, there are several definitions of sq ft (ft^2) here and folks are interchanging their uses whether aware of it or not. 1) sq ft = the amount of sq ft your cabinet/cage sits on. 2) sq ft = the amount of sq ft attri

Re: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Duane Waddle
On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 8:46 PM, Justin M. Streiner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > While there are certainly customers out there who think along these lines, > most of the enterprise customers I've run across in the past who would be > in the market for data center colo would just as soon play the

RE: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Justin M. Streiner
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008, Frank Bulk - iNAME wrote: So perhaps the question isn't so much how many kW's I can pack into a 42U rack, but for the data center designer, what's the best price point if real estate is not a significant issue. Or to say it another way, what kW density per rack will give m

RE: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Frank Bulk - iNAME
n Behalf Of Ben Butler Sent: Sunday, March 23, 2008 12:11 PM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: RE: rack power question There comes a point where you cant physically transfer the energy using air any more - not less you wana break the laws a physics captin (couldn't resist sorry) - to your DX sys

RE: rack power question

2008-03-24 Thread Barry Shein
Here's another project which has dubbed themselves "teraflops from milliwatts" which I believe is shipping iron. I have no first-hand experience with their products: http://www.sicortex.com/ -- -Barry Shein The World | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.Th

Re: rack power question

2008-03-23 Thread Marshall Eubanks
ds Ben -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 23 March 2008 02:34 To: Patrick Giagnocavo Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: rack power question

RE: rack power question

2008-03-23 Thread Alex Rubenstein
> > Surly we should be asking exactly is driving the demand for > > high density computing and in which market sectors and is > > this actually the best technical solution to solve them > > problem. I don't care if IBM, HP etc etc want to keep > > selling new shiny boxes each year because they ar

Re: rack power question

2008-03-23 Thread Joel Jaeggli
PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 23 March 2008 02:34 To: Patrick Giagnocavo Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: rack power question

RE: rack power question

2008-03-23 Thread michael.dillon
> Surly we should be asking exactly is driving the demand for > high density computing and in which market sectors and is > this actually the best technical solution to solve them > problem. I don't care if IBM, HP etc etc want to keep > selling new shiny boxes each year because they are tell

Re: rack power question

2008-03-23 Thread Paul Vixie
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Curran) writes: > Also, you're still going to want to size the power drop so that > the measured load won't exceed 80% capacity due to code. that's true of output breakers, panel busbars, and wire. on the other hand, transformers (e.g., 480->208 or 12K->480) are rated at

RE: rack power question

2008-03-23 Thread Ben Butler
Regards Ben -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 23 March 2008 02:34 To: Patrick Giagnocavo Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: rack power question smime.p7s Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature