[HPADM] Fwd: RE: Data Center Temperature Control Device

From: Ben Le (ble_at_pcc.edu)
Date: 08/01/05

  • Next message: BAKHSHESH Kazem: "[HPADM] Faq"
    Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2005 08:24:57 -0700
    To: hpux-admin@dutchworks.nl
    
    
    

    Hi List,

    Bill nailed this issue. What I am looking for is " high temperature breaker
    that shuts off ALL power to everything in the room". Does anyone know where
    to find this device?

    Ben

    >Date: Sat, 30 Jul 2005 20:58:05 -0400
    >From: Bill Hassell <bill@billhassell.com>
    >Subject: RE: [HPADM] Data Center Temperature Control Device
    >To: 'Ben Le' <ble@pcc.edu>
    >X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook, Build 10.0.6626
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    >Original-recipient: rfc822;ble@mailsp.pcc.edu
    >
    >As you have seen, the AC is a critical part of your data center.
    >The damage it's failure has caused will be enormous. There will
    >be total failures which are easy to spot but disks, computers,
    >network devices, tape drives, etc, that seem to work have been
    >permanently damaged and will constantly have unreliable and
    >intermittent errors, sometimes undetectable until the data is
    >checked.
    >
    >You DO NOT start by adding fancy pager message systems and
    >computer-based notifications. Depending on the size of your heat
    >load and the room size, the 138deg level might be reached in just
    >a few minutes, far too short a time for anyone to react. So the very
    >first item in the computer room is a high temperature breaker that
    >shuts off ALL power to everything in the room. Period. No fancy
    >signaling to the computers to shutdown, just pull the plug with
    >a simple mechanical switch. That should be installed right now.
    >These breakers are quite inexpensive when compared with loss
    >that you've experienced. You want the simplest possible solution
    >as your last resort. Set the breaker to about 100-110 deg. That
    >way, a momentary burst of warm air won't dump power.
    >
    >Then you look at fancy monitoring systems. But before you do
    >that, make absolutely sure that partial loss of power to your AC
    >systems may also cause a power failure to your phone and data
    >lines or your networking equipment. You need to trace all the
    >circuits and then do some what-if planning. An automated
    >system will just sit there trying to page you but because some
    >component along the network (phones, DSL, etc) also went
    >out, there is no message to the outside world--exactly the
    >reason you need a mechanical breaker as the final backup.
    >
    >As far as automated sensors, there are several companies
    >that make sensors for the LAN, for serial port connections,
    >and of course the simplest: a contact closure. Here's something
    >you probably did not think of: your security alarm system. Most
    >useful systems have lots of contact closure inputs and by tying
    >several temp sensors into the alarm system, your monitoring
    >company can provide notification by actually calling a list of people
    >until someone responds. And just the same as computer-based
    >sensors and pager/email notices, make sure the alarm system
    >will run during a powerfailure.
    >
    >--
    >Bill Hassell
    >
    >-----Original Message-----
    >From: hpux-admin-owner@DutchWorks.nl [mailto:hpux-admin-owner@DutchWorks.nl]
    >On Behalf Of Ben Le
    >Sent: Friday, July 29, 2005 12:35 PM
    >To: hpux-admin@DutchWorks.nl
    >Subject: [HPADM] Data Center Temperature Control Device
    >
    >
    >Hi List,
    >
    >The story is, on one Sunday, our both ACs in the data center died. The data
    >center temperature got to 138F until someone discovered.
    >I am looking for a temperature control device that will execute the
    >following conditions when the room get to 85F.
    >- Send Email message.
    >- Page the Engineer.
    >- Shut off the main UPS power that feeds all the servers. That's fine. I
    >rather cold power shutdown the servers instead to let them melt.
    >
    >Does any one have any recommendations or references. Thanks.
    >
    >Ben
    >
    >
    >__________________________________________
    >Benjamin Le
    >Sr. Systems Administrator
    >Information Technology Services
    >Portland Community College
    >Voice:(503)-977-4736 Fax:(503)-977-8124
    >Mailto:ble@pcc.edu <mailto:ble@pcc.edu%A0%A0%A0%A0> http://www.pcc.edu
    ><http://www.pcc.edu/>
    >

    __________________________________________
    Benjamin Le
    Sr. Systems Administrator
    Information Technology Services
    Portland Community College
    Voice:(503)-977-4736 Fax:(503)-977-8124
    Mailto:ble@pcc.edu http://www.pcc.edu

    
    

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