+1 
We have ours around 65 and 50 for humidity.  We have installed a temp/humidity 
alarm that will alert the hospital operator (we don't man i/s 24x7) who will 
page I/S and Plant Ops if it goes off.
On that same note, we called HP (we use DL 380's) and they said max temp is 95F.

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 2 Jun 2009 16:59:04 -0500
Subject: RE: PROPER OPERATING TEMPERATURES FOR SERVERS
























The part that I find most admins miss in the specs mentioned is
the humidity. When you are running the A/C in a room almost constantly the
humidity tends to drop fairly quickly. Once the humidity in your data center
goes below 40% the chance of static electricity building starts to climb fast.
I have yet to see it snow in a server room, but I have seen plenty of servers
over the years taken out by a static charge. I run my centers at 71 degrees F
and 50% humidity.

TVK

 





From: Klint Price -
ArizonaITPro [mailto:[email protected]] 

Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 4:41
 PM

To: NT System Admin Issues

Subject: RE: PROPER OPERATING TEMPERATURES FOR SERVERS





 



That depends.





 





I operate a data center in Phoenix, and it gets plenty hot here.





 





I
was under the impression that a server room at 68 degrees was optimal, but when
I conducted further research several months ago, it appears 85 degrees is just
fine too assuming proper air flow, failovers, and architecture.





 





Personally,
I stick to 74 degrees or so because I have older equipment.  I know Google
runs at about 85 degrees, but they also use a commodity home-brew server per
their own specs.





 





Links:





 





http://www.adc.com/Library/Literature/102264AE.pdf





 





 ASHRAE's "Thermal Guidelines for Data Processing
Environments"[4]
recommends a temperature range of 20–25 °C (68–75 °F) and humidity
range of 40–55% with a maximum dew point of 17°C as optimal for data
center conditions.[5]






 





 http://wistechnology.com/articles/4074/





 





“Because the average temperature [in data centers]
will rise from the standard 68 [degrees Fahrenheit] to over 85 F in about 8.6
minutes when a problem arises from, for example, a power outage or an
air-conditioning failure, the staff in charge must be alerted and take
immediate action,” Sigourney says. “With the critical shutdown
threshold for most equipment is universally agreed to be at 85 F, the best
response would be to use the automatic server shut-down capabilities included
with AVTECH’s PageR Enterprise software to eliminate risk by shutting
down the most expensive and critical hardware when extreme conditions
occur.” 





 





and finally





 





http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2009/03/23/will-server-warranties-get-hotter-too/





 











From: Murray Freeman [[email protected]]

Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 2:20
 PM

To: NT System Admin Issues

Subject: PROPER OPERATING TEMPERATURES FOR SERVERS







Like
many companies these days, we're looking to reduce our expenses. With the hot
weather almost here in the Chicago area, I'm being asked to up the thermostat
in our server room, to allow it to get warmer and thus save some money. We have
been keeping the temperature around the mid 70's, and I'm concerned about
higher temps in the server room causing servers to crash or at least reduce
their lifetime. What od you think is the maximum operating temperature for a
room with servers? We humans are not in the room that often, so it's strictly a
case of a safe temperature for the hardware. There's no need to determine how
many servers I have or how large the room is, just the temperature necessary to
safely operate servers.





 



Murray 




 



 


 

 


 


 

        
        
 
        

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