nanog mailing list archives

Re: Why choose 120 volts?


From: Ronald Cotoni <setient () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 28 May 2009 11:49:27 -0500

I have some similar input.  At my company, we use both 120 and 208
volt depending on what servers we are putting in the racks.  We can
fill up every single rack to full capacity 100% of the time by using
energy efficient servers.  The fact that it is 120 volt or 208 volt
hardly matters on most machines except Xeon/Opeteron class systems.
We use a lot of Core 2 duo, Atom and Xeon Low Voltage processors.
This allows us higher density on the same power and makes 208 volt
mostly irrelevant.

On Thu, May 28, 2009 at 11:18 AM, William Pitcock
<nenolod () systeminplace net> wrote:
On Tue, 2009-05-26 at 12:39 -0700, Seth Mattinen wrote:
I have a pure curiosity question for the NANOG crowd here. If you run
your facility/datacenter/cage/rack on 120 volts, why?


We are using 120V in our colocation spaces.

I've been running my facility at 208 for years because I can get away
with lower amperage circuits. I'm curious about the reasons for using
high-amp 120 volt circuits to drive racks of equipment instead of
low-amp 208 or 240 volt circuits.

The reason why we are using 120V is because we have pre-existing
equipment (such as PDUs) that only support 120V operation.  I believe
our newer PDUs support 120/208/240, but do not have the time to
investigate that, and we still have a couple of older APC units still in
service.  Our servers don't really care which voltage we provide, most
of the PSUs can determine 120 vs 240 automatically, even.

Also, at least at Equinix Chicago, 120V service was cheaper when we
colocated there.  I do not know if this is the same case at Steadfast in
Chicago, and as far as I know, HE does not offer 208/240 service in
their Fremont-2 facility.  I could be misinformed on that, though.
--
William Pitcock
SystemInPlace - Simple Hosting Solutions
1-866-519-6149





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