SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Data Centre

Raritan PDU tracks rack temperatures

Raritan PDU tracks rack temperatures

By:   On: 10 Apr 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

The company says it's the only power distribution unit on the market that offers such granular monitoring of heat in the data centre. Plus, why you always have to wear long sleeves

See the IT World Canada Webcast Sustainable IT: Good for business and the environment. IT World Canada's John Pickett is joined by David Douglas, Vice-President, Eco Responsibility, Sun Microsystems Inc., and Chris Mines, Senior Vice-President and analyst, Forrester Research

Cooling systems eat up about a third of a data centre’s power – 21 per cent for the actually cooling units, and eight per cent for the HVAC fans, according to Diakow. About 50 per cent is drawn by the IT equipment itself, and just as they tend to overcool, enterprises can overprovision power for that equipment.

“What we find that typically happens is that a data centre will gear up for the power that the servers are rated for,” Diakow said. “So they’ll go to the plate on the server and say, ‘this server draws this much power, we need to make sure we have enough power in the data centre for all these servers.’

“What the server manufacturers list is really the maximum power that that product is going to draw. Typically, we also find that these are the servers are rated at at least 25 per cent and sometimes 50 per cent over what they are running at. So there’s an opportunity there to save power.”

Intelligent PDUs that monitor power on an outlet-by-outlet basis allow data centre managers to adjust power up or down according to each server’s actual draw, Diakow said.

Simpson said deep visibility into electricity use is a prime consideration in choosing a PDU. Another is its efficiency in converting higher-voltage feeds and breaking them out for use on the individual boxes.

“That’s one of the areas of power loss, and that power loss goes away as heat as well, so not only do you lose power, you also have to spend additional money extracting the heat that (power) loss created.”










Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 2173   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




dwebb

Related Content

Six steps to a green data centre
Six steps to a green data centreAccording to a 2007 Gartner report, during the last five years the power demands of data centre equipment have grown by five or more times. IT executives need to start investigating alternative ways to address this issue. By following these six simple steps, they can come closer to achieving their vision of a green data centre, according to author Darryl Wilson
The Green Data Centre: Cooling
The Green Data Centre: CoolingCooling can eat up a third of your data centre power bill. Take advantage of an overlooked natural resource: our cold climate
Green IT changes data centre power demands
Green IT changes data centre power demandsWith electricity consumption rising, enterprise IT organizations are running out of energy before they run out of raised floor space. How to plan for the future and cut down on costs
Data centre horsepower vs. cost?
a u.k.-based pricing and tariff research company called tariff consultancy ltd. recently reported that the cost of data centre racks has increased across certain european countries. the u.k. and austria were found to have the highest average prices, and portugal, denmark and france have the highest rate of price increase in 2008.
YouTube Fridays: A sock puppet learns about SAS
i don't know what the prize was, but business intelligence vendor sas institute recently launched an employee video contest where staffers had to try and explain the power of its product line. this clip only came in second place, but i lo
LinkedIn guilt: The new social networking disease
“linkedin,” the cio said. “that thing drives me nuts.”i was in a meeting today with one of our editorial advisory boards when the above statement was made. these are not really public discussions, so i won’t mention names, but suffice it to say this is a really likeable guy who’s running a major technology operation for a well-known canadian company. we were talking about the whole soci
blog comments powered by Disqus