Building an Energy Efficient Datacenter?
asc4 asks: "The company I work for is a webhosting and colocation company. As our power utilization grows, we have begun searching for ways to make our datacenter more efficient. The biggest hit from the utility company comes in the peak usage charge, which penalizes (rather severely) for the highest sustained burst of usage during a billing period. Due to the nature of the colocation business, we can't control how much or when client devices use power, so I'm wondering: is there's something we can do at the datacenter level to help smooth out our power consumption, over the course of a given period of time?"
"In these days of hybrid cars, Energy Star devices, and in general more eco-friendly power consumption, it seems like there must be some products out there that can help make datacenters more efficient, as well. Could fuel cell technology be something to look into? Would flywheels or capacitors help? How about using more efficient AC units than what are available from the big names? What are others doing to reduce peak power consumption in high-drain datacenter environments?"
I have one of these (1.2GHz) and with 1 large HDD, encoder card, network, DVD etc - it idles at less than 20W and maxes at about 60 (encoding, playback, DVD all going, CPU 100%). Burst power when switched on seems to be about 72. This is less than the processor alone on a high spec box.
This will only work with non-CPU intensive operations. However IO seems to be pretty good on these boxes, so an IO bound server would probably not suffer too greatly using a VIA mobo.
Get a professional electrician in that knows about peak charges.
Older installations used to use giant flywheels, but not to limit peaks. They were used for power conditioning and limited power backup.
I'd do an extensive survey before trying anything else. Buy or rent a power meter that does logging and graphing. Check everything out for a month - each phase and the current draw on each phase, and current draw on each rack (each computer if possible).
Proper sequencing of cooling can drastically affect your power consumption. Never start your cooling motors when you're drawing a lot of power - motor startup is a huge peak. After doing a survey of your power needs you may be able to identify times when you can avoid turning the cooling system on which will lower your peak. For instance, before the daily peak, cool the data center down a few degrees more than usual. Then shut off one or more cooling system until after the daily peak. This can be tricky to correctly manage and implement, especially since it has to be automatic and failsafe.
Alternately, shop around for your power. check with a few competitive companies and see if they offer a better deal.
-Adam