This has been a very interesting thread.

Google pointed me to this Dell document which specs some of their servers 
having an expanded operating temperature range
*** based on the amount of time spent at the elevated temperature, as a 
percentage of annual operating hours. ***

ftp://ftp.dell.com/Manuals/all-products/esuprt_ser_stor_net/esuprt_poweredge/poweredge-r710_User%27s%20Guide4_en-us.pdf

I mention that because the "1% of annual operating hours" at 45 C would be two 
degrees higher than the 43 C stated as reached in the original email.

It would seem that Dell recognizes that there might be situations, such as 
this, where the "continuous operation" range (35 C) is briefly exceeded.

Tony Patti
CIO
S. Walter Packaging Corp.

-----Original Message-----
From: Erik Levinson [mailto:erik.levin...@uberflip.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 09, 2013 11:28 PM
To: NANOG mailing list
Subject: What to expect after a cooling failure

As some may know, yesterday 151 Front St suffered a cooling failure after 
Enwave's facilities were flooded. 

One of the suites that we're in recovered quickly but the other took much 
longer and some of our gear shutdown automatically due to overheating. We shut 
down remotely many redundant and non-essential systems in the hotter suite, and 
transferred remotely some others to the cooler suite, to ensure that we had a 
minimum of all core systems running in the hotter suite. We waited until the 
temperatures returned to normal, and brought everything back online. The entire 
event lasted from approx 18:45 until 01:15. Apparently ambient temperature was 
above 43 degrees Celcius at one point on the cool side of cabinets in the 
hotter suite. 

For those who have gone through such events in the past, what can one expect in 
terms of long-term impact...should we expect some premature component failures? 
Does anyone have any stats to share? 

Thanks

--
Erik Levinson
CTO, Uberflip
416-900-3830
1183 King Street West, Suite 100
Toronto ON  M6K 3C5
www.uberflip.com
 



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