On 07/28/2014 06:09 PM, Mark Hahn wrote:
Some involved in the discussion have stated only 5 - 10 kW per full rack,

always nice when people clearly declare themselves to be useless.

which is too small. Since I don't know exactly what systems I'm going to get from my RFP, I can't do exact calculations based on specific models. I could

RFP is a fatally flawed process, though vendors seem to like it,
and it's formal enough to make paper-pushers think it's sensible.

I agree, but I'm working at a state university now, so I'm required to issue RFPs for any purchase over $50,000. At previous employers, I didn't have to do this, and large purchases like this went much quicker, and I was more confident that I was getting what I was asking for.


OTOH, you can be pretty specific in your RFP: for instance, you
should be able to specify max total power, max power-per-node, etc.
don't forget PSU efficiency: a system drawing 300W from a 94%
"eighty-plus-platinum" is 319 at the plug, but a crappy old 70%
PSU will be nearly 430W!  higher-end PSUs also have flatter
efficiency curves in the middle, though unfortunately, they usually
peak at 50% (and from examples here:
http://www.plugloadsolutions.com/80PlusPowerSupplies.aspx
it looks like certification only requires testing at 10/20/50/100% load)


I'm dealing with a chicken-or-the-egg problem in this regard: We're purchasing a modular data center and cluster at the same time (and most likely from different vendors), so I need to use the estimated power draw of the cluster to spec the modular data center, and then use the specs of the modular data center to spec the cluster. Yes, my head hurts.

Prentice

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