nanog mailing list archives

Re: rack power question, and a prediction about "direct heat removal" (DHR)


From: "Robert E. Seastrom" <rs () seastrom com>
Date: Fri, 04 Apr 2008 14:32:39 -0400



Patrick Giagnocavo <patrick () zill net> writes:

For fire suppression, an alarm would sound and only when it can in
some fashion be "proven" that no humans are inside the area, CO2 is
flooded into the area and the fire goes out.  Some form of ducting
which mixes the CO2 with regular air and exhausts it is needed after
the fire is out.  Firemen go in with oxygen if they need to enter
before this is done.  (obviously there would be an entire tested
procedure for how this is done, probably including a small oxygen mask
with ~4 minutes of O2 placed beside each fire extinguisher and within
easy reach).

You'll never get your insurance company to sign off on this.  The US
Navy loses people to CO2 fire suppression systems from time to time;
acceptable risk on a warship and acceptable risk in a data center are
not even on the same page.  This includes dumps that are unintentional
- having enough CO2 around to do meaningful fire suppression in a
moderate size datacenter has its own hazards associated with it.

http://gcaptain.com/maritime/blog/the-dangers-of-co2-use-in-firefighting-videos/

Being in the same room as a halon or fm200 dump is bad enough.  I
don't think I'd be willing to work at (or make my employees work at) a
datacenter that had CO2 fire suppression installed, no matter how
strenuous the assurances were that there were interlocks in place.

                                        ---Rob


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