Saturday, March 7, 2020

Air-conditioned server racks cooling technology

The air-conditioned server rack air conditioner is resilient and designed to manage high discharge temperatures directly from the server into the aisle space. By handling the heat load closer to the source, the air-conditioned server rack is very efficient in both floor space and power usage and is perfect for addressing hot spots in high to medium density IT environments. Smaller air units can mount inside the cabinet for better aesthetics. However, larger units side mount, externally allowing the entire internal U space to be utilized. iRack series air conditioned server racks offer a unique condensate management system which eliminates wet floors, buckets and drain tubes. Our air conditioning, cooling solutions, server cabinets and server racks offer the latest technology to target the issues that cause you the most concern: power problems, monitoring, access and security and heat.
Our designer, wide-body computer enclosure offers a solution to managing the profusion of cables you have to deal with and its frame-within-frame design is structured to meet the mounting specifications of leading OEM manufacturers. This setting up side-to-side airflow design allows for abundant cabling space on either side as well. Network enclosures, network cabinets, and computer enclosures are designed to target the needs of your sophisticated network equipment. Protect your critical equipment, servers and other electronic equipment with our self-contained, air-conditioned server rack enclosure.  It's perfect for network and server enclosures and for identifying remote servers without the expense of creating additional room capacity.  For spot cooling or to ventilate pain areas, consider our rear door ventilation system in you server room. The room temperature or the ambient, temperature directly affects how server equipment functions when in use, the higher the ambient temperature, the greater the operating temperature unless, the server can compensate for the temperature with cooling technology. It’s no secret that high temperature is bad for computer hardware; air conditioned iRacks target just this problem directly by cooling the immediate area around the equipment. An air conditioned server rack puts less stress on the server’s cooling working parts and reduces the possibility of overheating damage and breakdown. To drop the ambient temperature it is common to set the server room’s air conditioning to a higher setting. Setting the air conditioning on full blast is not sensible or impossible when you have to store a server rack in a room full of people.  An iRack server rack is a self-contained unit so the air conditioner only has to cool the area immediately around the server equipment instead of the complete room. Air conditioned server racks by the efficient cooling technology and design cut down on your temperature-controlling costs.
Computer hardware that uses airflow functional cooling is vulnerable to harm from the elements. The systems fans which are constantly sucking air from one side of the system to the other, is sucking in everything from the atmosphere surrounding it, from microscopic dust, to moisture. Consistent exposure to moisture will damage electronic equipment, and the dust and debris filling in eventually blocks or chokes the vents for the flow of air, and thereby cooling. Subject to these conditions, prolonged exposure and choked airflow, cooling equipment becomes less effective. An iRack self-contained air conditioned server rack decreases how much damage the elements can cause. 
The 42RU configuration comes with 1200 depth and 600 & 800 widths and is made out of steel sheet. Some of its amazing features are a precision cooling unit, the battery bank and UPS, power concerns taken care of with an intelligent PDU, managing surveillance and physical security, and a smart KVM console for management of the server, also equipped with brush models and panels, blanking panels and a complete air-seal kit, for complete airflow management.

No comments:

Post a Comment