[AusNOG] Global switch Level 4 Hard disk's

Alex Samad - Yieldbroker Alex.Samad at yieldbroker.com
Tue Jan 14 06:41:34 EST 2014


Question

Who pays for this ? If you were in the suite and lost 20-40 drives, would insurance cover it and if not do you have any claim on GS if it was done in error. Or is it a case of you know the risks, buyer beware.

Curious

Alex

From: AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of James Braunegg
Sent: Monday, 13 January 2014 10:19 PM
To: John Edwards; ausnog at lists.ausnog.net
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] Global switch Level 4 Hard disk's


Dear All



I'd love to know if any Server or Storage Vendors have any meantime to failure reports based on exposure to different fire suppression systems, very interesting Read / Topic !!!



Kindest Regards


James Braunegg
P:  1300 769 972  |  M:  0488 997 207 |  D:  (03) 9751 7616
E:   james.braunegg at micron21.com<mailto:james.braunegg at micron21.com>  |  ABN:  12 109 977 666
W:  www.micron21.com/ip-transit<http://www.micron21.com/ip-transit>   T: @micron21


[Description: Description: Description: Description: M21.jpg]
This message is intended for the addressee named above. It may contain privileged or confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient of this message you must not use, copy, distribute or disclose it to anyone other than the addressee. If you have received this message in error please return the message to the sender by replying to it and then delete the message from your computer.



-----Original Message-----
From: AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of John Edwards
Sent: Monday, January 13, 2014 10:06 PM
To: ausnog at lists.ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog at lists.ausnog.net>
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] Global switch Level 4 Hard disk's





On 13 Jan 2014, at 2:00 pm, Brad Gould <bradley at internode.com.au<mailto:bradley at internode.com.au>> wrote:



> Sudden pressure increase or temperature drop with a gas dump?

>



I'm with Brad,



Gas expansion is an endothermic process.



The temperature will drop significantly - more than you could effect with a block of ice. In a data centre, the air temp will be back to normal in one cycle, so humans may not notice the difference.



Disks are spinning at 10K rpm, operating at 55 degrees. It's not surprising that they would fail with a sudden drop in temperature. 3.5" SATA drives are going to be hit harder than 2.5" SAS drives, simply because they are bigger and will contract further.



Pressure increase on a gas drop will be negligible, and most hard drives are effectively sealed anyway.



Someone hit a hot hard drive performing a transfer with a CO2 fire extinguisher, and let us know the result :)



John



_______________________________________________

AusNOG mailing list

AusNOG at lists.ausnog.net<mailto:AusNOG at lists.ausnog.net>

http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/attachments/20140113/5b43b624/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 2683 bytes
Desc: image001.jpg
URL: <http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/attachments/20140113/5b43b624/attachment-0001.jpg>


More information about the AusNOG mailing list