Re: One more thing to watch out for at data centers - fire drills
On 9/17/2016 07:39, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/a-loud-sound-just-shut-down-a-banks-data-ce...
Releasing inert gas from fire suppression units that were over pressurized resulted in an extremely loud noise
My experience is only with in-specification systems (and only in tape libraries) but those tests were pretty loud. – causing cabinets
full of hard drives to vibrate – which got transmitted to the read – write heads of the drives.
My experiences were back in the days of washing-machine class disc drives and they were a 4-hour fire-wall away, but I don't remember them being impacted. (I can't believe that I was allowed to conduct a test with them running, but I don't remember shutting them down.) I wonder if orientation mattered--mine were all platters parallel to the floor, I wonder if the damaged ones were parallel to the wave front.
full of hard drives to vibrate – which got transmitted to the read – write heads of the drives.
Amazing sort of outage + data loss, and this time the physical security plant chief gets to write up the RCA.
-- "Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid." --Albert Einstein From Larry's Cox account.
On 09/17/2016 02:43 PM, Larry Sheldon wrote:
My experiences were back in the days of washing-machine class disc drives and they were a 4-hour fire-wall away, but I don't remember them being impacted. (I can't believe that I was allowed to conduct a test with them running, but I don't remember shutting them down.)
I wonder if orientation mattered--mine were all platters parallel to the floor, I wonder if the damaged ones were parallel to the wave front.
If you watched the video of the guy who screamed at his disk drives to cause temporary faults, the JBOD had its platters horizontal to the floor. One of the reason the washing-machine-sized CDC Storage Module Drives weren't affected by high noise level is the sheer beefy mass of the head assembly and the voice coil. Also, the track spacing on the platters of those drives was far less dense, so any noise-induced mis-tracking would be minuscule, and easily handled by said voice-coil's position-error system. The heads were larger, as well as the head arms. In this situation, mass is your friend.
participants (2)
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Larry Sheldon
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Stephen Satchell