Great to see you both back. This system looks so awesome. It still amazes me the amount of infrastructure required to keep my server running and protected from from everything.
I'm in the fire alarm industry and have yet to see a Vesda implemented. I assumed that they were used in critical environments like data centers and file vaults. Everything I saw looks top class.
Hey, @Custodian Data Centres may I ask what hardware / Gear / cable you use for the server and rj45 plugs? Whenever I build LAN cables for house wiring, in the office and on projects and I have to do it like three times. During crimping or after ... it is always one or more wires that is not fully connected .
It's quite interesting, because every time i have to go to a DC i have to do an induction. They explain this, if you can't make it out things are going to be flying around you & also there is a high chance we will find you passed out. They also explain that was also covered in the video the oxygen levels should be enough for you to survive.
Yes. Gas bottles will be regularly maintained. The gauges will be checked weekly to ensure pressure is above 285, when gauges are lower they will be either swapped out or refilled.
THAT is how it is done properly. That was also the case at my work 3 years ago in their small internal Datacenter. OVA and many other Hosters are just saying "the local firefighters know the datacenter and we have a plan" yeah, OVH also had a plan. But look what happened. I also didn't know that many Datacenters don't have an argon fire extinguishing system. An Argon Fire Extinguishing System is imo a must have in a good Datacenter.
They did, however it wasn't quite working correctly so the gas didn't end up surpressing the flames, instead the movement in air must have been accelerating the burn.
They did, however it wasn't quite working correctly so the gas didn't end up surpressing the flames, instead the movement in air must have been accelerating the burn.
4:50 -- "gases that won't actually kill you". Correct me if I'm wrong, but those are inert gases intended to displace oxygen and halt combustion. If you were inside a chamber where those gases were being flooded into, you could suffer from hypoxia and succumb to the environment.
Nope, the gasses perform as James said, it drops oxygen down to such a low level fire cant live but you can, you do have to breath deeper and heavier, but you will be able to walk through the place and safely exit - BUT, the pressure of the discharge is powerful, it can destroy hard drives, so imagine what it could do to your eardrums. It was tried in some places to reduce the noise and pressure vibrations by having more discharge heads, but I still would prefer not to be in there :) Fun note: after discharge the gas can be trapped in there for some time until the Fire Dept tell you its clear to vent, some 20 mins later, if you try strike a match, it wont light.
I missed your videos, so glad to see you guys again
Gone again lol
Favorite IT network show. More please, lots more.
Welcome back. Audio was great even on my mobile. Looking forward to new videos and banter.
Glad to see you guys are back. This is my go to channel for anything network engineer related!! Appreciate the content!!
Glad to see you guys making vids again! Also those new close up shots very nice.
Great to see you both back. This system looks so awesome. It still amazes me the amount of infrastructure required to keep my server running and protected from from everything.
Keep em comming! You guys are AWSOME!
Looking forward to your future videos!
I'm currently in college struggling big time but seeing your videos keeps my motivation up.
I'm in the fire alarm industry and have yet to see a Vesda implemented. I assumed that they were used in critical environments like data centers and file vaults. Everything I saw looks top class.
Glad to see you guys back. Love the content. Keep up the great work.
Glad to have you guys back
So pleased to see you back guys! Nice to know the vids are back too! 🤩💜💜💜💜💜
Nice to have you back, looking forward for new content. Thanks for showing the fire suppression.
Very happy to see you guys back
Welcome Back. Your video appeared right at the top even though I subscribe to about 500 channels!
Glad to see you again!
Great to see you back. Can't wait for the next one :)
Glad to see you guys making videos again. Hope to see more soon!
Very glad you are back, keep up the good work.
Excelent from Dominican Republic, Next Disaster Recovery Plan !! Best Wishes from Caribbean
Question. at 0:40 why are the arrows going backwards?
Hey, @Custodian Data Centres may I ask what hardware / Gear / cable you use for the server and rj45 plugs? Whenever I build LAN cables for house wiring, in the office and on projects and I have to do it like three times. During crimping or after ... it is always one or more wires that is not fully connected .
Welcome back Custodian. From a Cambodian Fan
That reminds me of AWS Frankfurt incident with the fire suppression system and the OVO fire. Nice content, tks for sharing
OVH should probably watch this.
Good to see you back guys , great video.
Nice to see you back !!
Glad to see you again.
Welcome back! Please post more videos. :)
Welcome back to you guys!!
Great to see you back.
Yayyy nice to see you! ❤️ your datacentre!
yay your back
Hey! Nice to see another video here.
What happens if the fire supression system is triggered by mistake?
Have you looked into the Red Bee Incident, when the supression system discharged it then caused a presure wave that trashed hard disk drives....
Was it inergen or argon gas?
At my old job we used inergen in the fire supression system
or fm200 the most common in this neck of the woods,, but by the green label, thats argon
Was hard to read, but looked like Nitrogen and Argon both on the label.
Seriously, was waiting on someone to say what kind of gas is used here.
என்ன தல அல்லயே காணோம் போன பொங்கலுக்கு பாத்தது 😁👍🏼
Welcome back guys !!
Welcome back, great video :)
nice to see you guys back!
at last you guys are back!
YES! Welcome back
Welcome back!!
Welcome Back, has been a long yet well deserved wait,for a new video
Yay! Back on youtube!
Finally you guys are back,. 👍
It's quite interesting, because every time i have to go to a DC i have to do an induction.
They explain this, if you can't make it out things are going to be flying around you & also there is a high chance we will find you passed out.
They also explain that was also covered in the video the oxygen levels should be enough for you to survive.
Nice to see you guys :) Greetings from Poland 😉
Do you do a full test periodically (every x years) to ensure the gas does release?
Yes. Gas bottles will be regularly maintained. The gauges will be checked weekly to ensure pressure is above 285, when gauges are lower they will be either swapped out or refilled.
Good to see you back guys ! My day job - fire systems and suppression, nicely explained :-)
YOU'RE BACK!
Finally! Please make more videos!
Part of my job is auditing DCs!
Fantastic 🔥
Nice chiller.
Welcome back!
oh yeaaah welcome back guyss
How much do you pay if it's your equipment that goes flaming hot
Welcome back.
finally the best it guys are back!
Finally a new video :)
Are you not producing more videos? This channel is really cool, don't stop
No dry test? I would love to hear and see the shutters work. No gas discharge, naturally.
THAT is how it is done properly. That was also the case at my work 3 years ago in their small internal Datacenter.
OVA and many other Hosters are just saying "the local firefighters know the datacenter and we have a plan" yeah, OVH also had a plan. But look what happened. I also didn't know that many Datacenters don't have an argon fire extinguishing system.
An Argon Fire Extinguishing System is imo a must have in a good Datacenter.
Are those gas bottles inergen gas bottles consisting of Argon 50%,Nitrogen 42% and CO2 8%?
It’s probably ig55
can you show us what happens when it goes off?
ASH AND JAMES IS BACK
Very nice! Love it. I'm not talking about fires btw, I mean the video.
Epic timing, now that Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram are down~
Welcome back!!!!
😃 THEY'RE BAAA-ACK!!!
These videos are so interesting
in front of me James best of luck 🤞 all is life for you guys a dc
Yayyy your back
Fire test run please!
bright in futures in all
Best buy.
It’s a shame OVH didn’t have this in place
They did, however it wasn't quite working correctly so the gas didn't end up surpressing the flames, instead the movement in air must have been accelerating the burn.
They did, however it wasn't quite working correctly so the gas didn't end up surpressing the flames, instead the movement in air must have been accelerating the burn.
Interesting video. Point for improvement is the audio level of the intro, it's very loud compared to the rest of the video
i was about 99% sure that very pale boy was a mannequin till i saw him moving
FM200? Argonite? Novec?
Wheres the halon?
Halon hasn't really been used for some time and pretty sure it's banned on fire suppression systems in the UK completely now.
@@tgm9991 well then, how are you supposed to get rid of inquisitive beancounters who are afraid of windows, and alway use the lift?
Welcome back, missed you guys.
Nice!
It’s great to see you have the latest vesda -e series installed.
Woo-hoo, new video
Finally :-)!
OVH didn't have these
long time no see :')
i am here with u james bonddi yaar
Wonder boys .
I HAVE BEEN MISSING YOU BOTH AND THIS GODDAMN INTRO THAT SCARED ME... Can I ask what is the song on it?
How is my phone going
Nice
nice!
Pretty amazing how even in 2021, we have to be careful to prevent and fight fire.
You seriously thought fires weren't going to be a thing in 2021?
4:50 -- "gases that won't actually kill you". Correct me if I'm wrong, but those are inert gases intended to displace oxygen and halt combustion. If you were inside a chamber where those gases were being flooded into, you could suffer from hypoxia and succumb to the environment.
Nope, the gasses perform as James said, it drops oxygen down to such a low level fire cant live but you can, you do have to breath deeper and heavier, but you will be able to walk through the place and safely exit - BUT, the pressure of the discharge is powerful, it can destroy hard drives, so imagine what it could do to your eardrums.
It was tried in some places to reduce the noise and pressure vibrations by having more discharge heads, but I still would prefer not to be in there :)
Fun note: after discharge the gas can be trapped in there for some time until the Fire Dept tell you its clear to vent, some 20 mins later, if you try strike a match, it wont light.
@@Ressy66 Interesting, thanks for the insight!
i'm guessing coz of covid but you guys would have been essential workers for this period
Nice have you not got an extraction unit to pul the gas out?
HVAC systems can do that