A DAY in the LIFE of the DATA CENTRE | GENERATOR TESTING with ASH!
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- Опубліковано 10 жов 2019
- We're back with another instalment of our "DAY in the LIFE of the DATA CENTRE" series, and Ash is taking you guys with him on a generator test at our Kent data centre.
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A video of a data center power failure sent me here
Literally same
Same
What’s up brudda!
x2
Same
The sheer volume and sound is scary enough. But if you also image the amount of energy, enough to vaporize you in a bright flash, is being transferred and switched, its terrifying.
It's only a danger if you opened the enclosure door. It's not enough to vaporize you, but it definitely could give you serious third-degree burns. The enclosure is designed to handle the worst-case arc incident.
He did just say that the generator is "only" 500kw. I think you're thinking of powerstation where they put on protective suits to throw a switch, they handle a bit more power than these single sections of a datacenter do. It's still a scary amount, but peanuts compared to what the big boys do.
7:03 "Sorry was that 'yes' or 'not yet'?"
"Nawts... Yest"
"OK just gonna do the thing"
Lmfao!!!
He said "Sorry, yes."
...in a mildly frustrated tone of voice
I see youtube algorithm has chosen this channel
Yes
Same here! It's so dumb! I thinks I'm only interested in the last thing I accidentally clicked on and ONLY that, there's people I'm still subscribed to that I've forgotten existed because it's showing me Tiktok and a UPS in a data center failing.
It is good to see that some companies do a proper full test of the whole system as i have found that some computer bosses will not allow this full changeover but only to run the generators for a short amount of time that does not do them any good without a load and does not give any indication that the whole system will work as designed when a mains power failure occurs,Foolhardy!
This is a channel I never knew I needed in my life.
I am just about to get a small UPS for a FreeNAS Server - Now if feels like a joke 😂
Get the 1400 not the 700.
@ sorry i don't unterstand
@@Felix-ve9hs 1400VA
Don't skimp. Get a bit larger. Did you include everything you need for the stability (monitor, remote modem or KVM)? Does it allow extra batteries for more run timeor do you pick the biggest VA so you are far DOWN on the load vs runtime curve
Depends on where you are we have a power failure roughly every ten years for fifteen minutes to half an hour. In Thailand it's a few times a day and brown outs at random.
Very good that you test the generators under full load, diesel loves to be run hard.
Not sure how your large UPS systems work in the UK but here in the USA, UPS systems of this size and class are always online. We call it double conversion where the utility (mains) AC is rectified and float charges the battery bank. The inverter is always feeding the load. As the rectifier and battery are DC, they are simply spliced together. There is no switch involved. The rectified mains DC is normally about 10 volts above the battery string voltage to keep the batteries in charge mode. Of course there is a static and maintenance bypass switch on each UPS but normally the UPS output is never interrupted during a grid failure. Also at this size, we normally run at 480 volts which is a US standard distribution voltage, that is stepped down to 120/208 volts for the loads.
Hearing a Gen-Set under load ... the most "Beautiful Sound on the Planet" .. during a prolonged power outage. Cheers ........... thanks for sharing this
I love that too ❤️
Why did you put quotes around Beautiful Sound on the Planet?
Just found this channel yesterday and it has quickly become one of my favorite channels. Keep up the good work and the videos coming!
My inner "What if it goes wrong? scenario" and "intermittent beeping noises" nerds are going crazy for this video
Well you just gotta go to the generator then find out what the alarm about....if you can clear the alarm...then you should start the generator manually...then let the ATS/STS take over when power is Stable from Generator, otherwise you should hustle to fix the cause of alarm....
@@alfaheston i think you misunderstand the person’s comment
Nice facility - very clean.
Guy on radio: no, yes!
You should agree on clearly speaking. Look to aviation or military.
Definitely heard what you heard -- god forbid the guy meant 'no', what would he have said? "Yes, no?!!?" ... Hopefully, however, the system is robust enough that no true level of 'readiness' is actually necessary, since as we all know, the power companies are more often than not unable to give a warning before the mains power goes out!
3:47 Subtitles say:
"James you're sleeping"
"Yes"
😂😂
QUALITY CONTENT
The transfer switch we had was a 3 pump up then turn the knob. Them BAM! It made me jump too like you feel the amps. Then the generator diesel pumped out black smoke for a few seconds while picking up the load. Zero automation by the way.
Who came from the youtube algorithm?
Me
That's really great to get info straight from datacenter guys like you, keep up the good work !
Please please please please make these more often :D I watched one video and I HAD to watch those others too! I absolutely LOVE these videos! Thanks for the entertaiment!
A friend of 20 years works at Services Australia, Centrelink, Medicare, Many more Data Centre.. he blew my mind when he told me about a Direct Fuel line that runs from a Petrol Service Station close by, Directly to there Generators..... ( He said the system must never go down )
Be interesting to know if it’s unmetered at the servo , direct pipe from main diesel tank , or possibly other fuels ,
And at the government generator plant room , they have a meter for whatever fuel that is pumped from the service station (the servo might have a auxiliary tank that is rented to the Australian government owned (services Australia )
That way re filling the emergency fuel tanks can be done at the (BP , or Caltex )
Better than having a massive fuel tanker enter the complex
"their", please.
Cool to see this being done. I work in a DC as a hall engineer. Changing Server motherboards etc. So i hear the tests happening but we never get to see whats being done.
Nice job, just a quick clarification,why ATS -6 gen takes too long to be up. usually it's less than 12-15 sec. but here it took more than 30 sec .
The dude on the radio sounds like a imperial droid
hahahahahahah
So, can those guys say they drive a V10 at work?
I felt like George Russell was giving me the tour
Very informative ! Glad I found this channel.
linus tech tips data centre edition
Thank you, this is absolutely golden information
Thank you very much for fantastik video👍👍👍Greate job!
Just found the channel and love it. What a great idea shows transparency within the industry, I work for NTT Global EMCA at my site with have 40 Gen-set at 1250kw total load. all of our network is via PLC so we can export back to the grid. keep it up guys
oh wow you work at NTT, does NTT offer single U colo or so in their locations
Awwww those are some cute little generators!
Great to see this stuff. Thanks for showing us this testing.
great work guys!! scaring during CB operation happens to me everytime too :)
Great to see this being done properly! Far too many places run the generators unloaded as a test.. :/
Management is always too scared.
@@sjf4405 always ends up biting you in the ass!
A loaded test is required to meet NFPA 99 testing requirements. Many newer installations that have an iso-parallel bus will have an on-site load bank so that individual gensets can be tested at full design load, without placing any undue risks on customer equipment. In the example here, one of the parallel generators is turned down in order to increase the load on the remaining units, but doing this presents the risk of running without your engineered redundancy, and still falls short of design loading. The extremely long ATS neutral delay also serves no purpose other than unnecessarily damaging UPS batteries.
That's not a test, just exercising the engine. Absolutely foolish not to test under load on a regular basis.
Love your videos guys. Keep up the good work!
Really cool video guys. Thank you!
Thanks for sharing this .. Cheers
I have recently carried out a series of load-bank tests on mission-critical sets from 40kVA to 2000 kVA. The customer used to run the sets up once a month to make sure they started, but never ran on full load. A lot of them were over-specified, resulting in carbon build-up, sticky valves, clogged silencers etc. My job was to run the sets up to 100% of plate rating for 4 hours, to make sure that they do not fail under operating conditions. After the usual checks and inspection, staged increases of loading, (5 minutes warm-up, 5 minutes 10%, 10 minutes 25%, 10 minutes 50%, then the balance of 4 hours at 100%), were implemented. One set would only run to 80% without overheating, another had a failed turbo-charger bearing, another had a radiator leak that only showed on full load, etc, etc. Once the test is complete, a 10 minute no-load cool-down period is done.
Once the customer was aware of the issues, and they were dealt with, their decision was to load-bank the sets bi-weekly. (It's a great job for a winter's day; parking 20 feet in front of a 400kW fan-heater certainly keeps the van warm!)
How come you didn't do an overload test like running them at 110%?
@@TheManLab7 I am guessing because overloading is generally not a situation the generator is designed to handle on a bi-weekly schedule and might result in damage more than detect it.
@@TheManLab7 I imagine they were accurately specified and would never run at 110%. The control systems should not be designed to ask for a damaging output from the genset. Another assumption here but in the case of less than N working generators during an outage I would program the control software to keep the generators capped at 100% and use the UPSes to hold up the rest of the loads while a decision is made about which loads to cut or throttle down if it is not automatic. If you need 3 gensets and you only have 2 running it is better to keep your 2 at 100% by cutting loads (assuming you can't hold the excess load until an emergency genset can arrive) than it is to go dark because you broke them trying to keep everything running. If I was running a NOC all my major services/applications would need to be locally throttleable, at least manually.
Your question isn't silly, I just don't think that's the way NOC administrators and operators think.
That must have been a nice smokeshow as the exhaust got up to temperature for the first time a in a long while.
i know this may be a bit of a secret topic, but i would love to see a video about some of the security of the DC, both network and physical, monitoring and detection, prevention and response
Great Insight Video!
Great video , very well explained ⚡️
Man, that's a lot of power out of that tiny engine. Ours is .9 megawatt and is easily three times that size. It's the one part of my job that I truly loathe - monthly engine runs. It is incredibly foolish to stand in front of those ATS panels when the transfers takes place. I flip the switch and take off. I can get out of the room into a safe spot before the transfer takes place. Hopefully this guy won't end up in some arc flash accident video later on down the road. it scares me just watching him in this video.
Given the lack of high voltage warnings anywhere, I imagine that they're safe from arc flash with the cabinets closed.
A V10 is pretty much never a tiny engine.
Would like to see a video on the type of, and how you test you're fire suppression system(s).
Love these video's as they give us more insight on the daily workings in a DC, and see that the people working there enjoy their jobs.
these sites are amazing. I take care of a couple of unmanned ILA's for a national data line and the system there is entirely automatic, we do a test every 6 months, even though i've requested a minimum 3 months due to the nature of these sites on the network.... BUT its absolutely terrifying hearing the ATS click, especially since mine is a 3 way between mains, all open and gen. the click is powerful enough to shake the hut and you can feel the transfer through the earth.
love those castell locks
I work in a DC myself as an engineer and it was cool to see the differences and similarities between my site and yours. Wish we had radios though!
extremely interesting video guys, keep it up 😉
Thanks this was interesting
Gracias por el video ¡¡ saludos desde Bolivia
Ash, simply superb 😎
Nice setup guys
5:26 yes that contact made sure you knew it was kicking in.
Ayyy, Edgar’s Water, the same water dispenser fairy that we have at work!
You can tell this dude is on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
@@TAK-YON_ well, yeah. I mean, game recognizes game
Thanks very instructive videos
you should've said "bravo Six, going dark" on the radio, the other guy sounded like makarov on the radio. You getting scared gets me all the time 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Interesting to see this being done this is something I get involved in . Just wondering what if the electronics don’t work are you able to start and sync the generators by hand and switch the system by hand ?
@ 5:27...get used to it man...LOL!!!
That's a nice PHP weathermapper graph you have there :)
thank guys
Do you inform you "grid" about that test? I wonder how they compensate the loss of the load in the grid when you're doing the tests. thx
I like your DCIM tool
Love it
you guys are the bomb,
I swear I thought I heard him say "not yet" and then you say okay, let's turn the key. lol
I swear it was "Not yet" and then he did say okay and turned it lol. I guess if it was "not yet" and he did that, we would of heard some non so nice of oxford english.
I heard "I don't see any reason not to" instead of "not yet"
@@Timooooooooooooooo in other Words: Whatever happens after you turn the key off. Im not responsible for what happens next :D
Great video guys !!!
I'm very interested what DCIM you using, thanks in advance :)
Those big ATS auto breakers scare the $#@^& out of me too! every time!!
Good good good video!
Hello really good video
Regarding the implemetantations of the generators, was there a handover, regarding what procedures to follow when it comes to testing, periodic checks, and switching over from the mains to the generators?
Love it! why do you need this for such a long time?
I have a question, if you guys are still watching comments.
Why put the UPS outside of the load for normal operation conditions? What's the benefit of doing so? It almost seems like it'd be much more expensive to do it that way, but I'm sure there's some benefit to it.
I'm more used to mains/gen > UPS > load (with a automatic switch between the mains and the generators in case of mains failure), since the company I work for uses the UPS not only as a immediate backup but also to clean up the power going into the server racks.
I don't understand you. A UPS is always in the load and always out of the load. The batteries are always outside on the backup line. And depending on the configuration (mostly due to specs like load), the basic components (filters, inverters and static switches) are on the main or on the backup lines.
I would say efficiency, most server PSU's have capacitors that will keep the server going when switching the relays.
The correct term is an On-line UPS or Off-Line like shown here.
I'm pretty sure that's what they're doing.
@@adpmol that an online Riello UPS, the generator supply will be filtered through the UPS as the only way for the load to be diverted from the system would be to place the unit into static or external bypass, in which case the UPS would not support the transfer. He has just simplified the process as when the UPS is online its only function is to clean the sinewaves.
i love how this all comes across as a walk in the park during the test. I've been on site during a power failure waiting for a generator to kick in before the UPS dies and i can tell you its one of the most stressful times in an IT guys life....
At my company we use a manual diesel generator which means we have to manually swap all distribution boards one by one to the gen which is fun lol, jealous at how simple and automated a data centre can do it which makes sense when you cant afford any downtime whatsoever
Hi, can you show a video of the power distribution, Switchgear, UPS, PDU and connection to the racks.
Good video; you think it’s loud when it works properly; I was doing a test one time and a a switch jammed; so loud, and you could feel the thud; I jumped off the ground; I had to abort the test that time.
I feel like slamming a door would give this dude ptsd
Ikr.
🤣😂🤣😂 Totally he's too jumpy
Needs to clean out his shorts after this video!
2:00 i think it run at night by itself and return back to not get cought, smart energy working.
Interesting video. Thank you!
What are the green dongles in the background at 12:00+?
probably battery packs for their radio devices
I like your videos, I am just wondering if 10v1600 series is enough to get the energy for the hole data center. They have only 700kva and for example 20v4000 series has 4000kva output. Maybe it makes sense to replace all small once to 2 bigger once :)
Over by the ups was the vent on top for battry off gass or for heat offput
Running Cacti for monitoring I see :) Good olde reliable cacti
The longest wait of your life when doing mains fail, 30 seconds waiting for generator contactor /ACB to close, a million possibilities go through your mind 😂😂
a great morning at the power plant
How many gensets do you have?? I saw 3 of course, but do I understand you have 3 more??
I have run outdoor concerts on 10 Mw but this is very nice indeed, ty for the info
at 12:21 why did you guys blur out the stats of the gensets doesn't make much senseI wouldn't think to know what RPM and temperature and frequency is sensitive information
i need this for my off grid cabin data server
Pff small gensets and breakers, on my previous work they have breakers of 3kV/150A on the small blowers they make a BANG if they switch. The gen sets are automated synced with the grid, 1 genset is 3kV/2000A. This is nice to :)
good jobs
How long it takes to change over to genset source from utilities source?
Very nice to see this kind of procedure. Just curious what capacity are those UPS ?
I was surprised to see the hold up time seem so short, what was that? Maybe 60 seconds to 90%, maybe it was rounding down to 90% so 20 minutes at best?
@@kingrpriddick And I was surprised it's so long. 10-20 times the switch over to the generators is a huge safety margin. But that's probably needed to have enough of a buffer for the 2 hours to get a mobile generator when too many of the fixed ones fail.
WebNX should watch this
Well in my country we don't need a generator test, as the test runs automatically at least 5 times a day 😂
Are you saying that you have unreliable power?
@@jamescollins6085 sure, in summer and winter we have 50% power time. Else we get 70-80% power time..
Lol
You must live in California!
No I live in Baghdad
Good video - I used to do monthly genset testing on several large data centres (From 3 to 12 Meg). Once had the mains actually fail just before I conducted the test - saved me some work. 👍😁. Gensets on the 3MVA setup were V12 50 litre engines, the 12 meg site had 6 x 2MVA - 78 litre, V20’s. 👍
do you want a medal or a cookie?
I wouldn't stand in front of those breakers when they close.
someone's going to argue there's very little reason to move but for me I don't wanna be the very unlucky soul to experience the arc flash from one of those 😂
At least, don't be standing in front while wearing synthetic clothing (unless it's nomex), and look away.
Lookup what arc flash is. You should have protection gear. Good reason it makes you jump.
Thank you, Rich...I was wondering why he was so jumpy (Yep, I looked it up)...it's not the noise, it's the danger of arc flash. Protective gear would be a good idea.
Maaagic!
5:30 "bang"
There's always the question.... was it a good bang or or did something explode?
I guess that one good thing is that you've heard it.
12:38 what are the three green beans?
Dang old switchover scares