On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 05:38:03PM -0800, Chuck Guzis wrote:
On 24 Feb 2012 at 1:16, Alexander Schreiber wrote:
Well, these days people are building 19"
racks for high density
datacenters with builtin water cooling at the rack level. And when you
look at the power density of e.g. a fully loaded blade system has it
makes a lot of sense.
Well, in the old days, there were very few (I can think of one
Honeywell system) that used water cooling directly (i.e. direct
contact with heatsinks). The CDC gear used it in the condenser coils
located in the base of the CPU cabinet cooling unit. it made sense--
why ask the field engineers to run freon lines in addition to cables?
The freon was used to cool "cold plates"; i.e., cooling was not done
with air.
How do your water-fed server racks do their cooling? Air or cold-
plate or something else?
I haven't seen those setups in person, but the water cooled racks $VENDOR
was pitching to us in a previous job had direct hookups for cold (and
return hot) water. They were (IIRC) aiming to get 40+ KW of heat out of
the rack.
Kind regards,
Alex.
--
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and
looks like work." -- Thomas A. Edison