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    stand by computers in server room

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    • S
      scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      Did you manage to raise the temperature? Did it reduce the condensation problems?

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        IT-ADMIN @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said:

        Did you manage to raise the temperature? Did it reduce the condensation problems?

        no actually, the remote controller is still missing, and for the computer, i think we will buy a new one because it looks like the motherboard was damaged, and the computer is 3 years old so it is not a good idea to buy a motherboard, it is better to buy a new computer

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          IT-ADMIN
          last edited by

          i have no mean to measure the condensation, i think the working servers are hot enough to be protected against humidity

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            scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            Only $10 http://www.amazon.com/AcuRite-00613A1-Indoor-Humidity-Monitor/dp/B0013BKDO8

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              scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              My six year old actually owns a hygrometer of her own.

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                IT-ADMIN
                last edited by

                ah thank you i will check that 😉

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                  scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  It is a small but decent investment to make for your servers.

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                  • R
                    Reid Cooper
                    last edited by

                    Are you doing anything to monitor the internal temperatures of the servers in your server room? That is the temperature that matters most.

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                      IT-ADMIN @Reid Cooper
                      last edited by

                      @Reid-Cooper said:

                      Are you doing anything to monitor the internal temperatures of the servers in your server room? That is the temperature that matters most.

                      actually i know the temperature by the degree of the air conditioner

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                        Reid Cooper @IT-ADMIN
                        last edited by

                        @IT-ADMIN said:

                        @Reid-Cooper said:

                        Are you doing anything to monitor the internal temperatures of the servers in your server room? That is the temperature that matters most.

                        actually i know the temperature by the degree of the air conditioner

                        Actually that is exactly the mistake I was trying to help you to avoid. The AC unit can't tell you that. Airflow determines how much cooling the servers get and you can only tell how well things are working by asking the server to monitor itself and tell you the internal temperature. Nothing on the outside can tell you. It's a common mistake by new IT people in the data closet to think that keeping the air cool will keep the servers cool.

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                          IT-ADMIN @Reid Cooper
                          last edited by

                          @Reid-Cooper said:

                          @IT-ADMIN said:

                          @Reid-Cooper said:

                          Are you doing anything to monitor the internal temperatures of the servers in your server room? That is the temperature that matters most.

                          actually i know the temperature by the degree of the air conditioner

                          Actually that is exactly the mistake I was trying to help you to avoid. The AC unit can't tell you that. Airflow determines how much cooling the servers get and you can only tell how well things are working by asking the server to monitor itself and tell you the internal temperature. Nothing on the outside can tell you. It's a common mistake by new IT people in the data closet to think that keeping the air cool will keep the servers cool.

                          it is a good point, i should implement a monitoring software to get that info

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                            coliver @IT-ADMIN
                            last edited by

                            @IT-ADMIN said:

                            @Reid-Cooper said:

                            @IT-ADMIN said:

                            @Reid-Cooper said:

                            Are you doing anything to monitor the internal temperatures of the servers in your server room? That is the temperature that matters most.

                            actually i know the temperature by the degree of the air conditioner

                            Actually that is exactly the mistake I was trying to help you to avoid. The AC unit can't tell you that. Airflow determines how much cooling the servers get and you can only tell how well things are working by asking the server to monitor itself and tell you the internal temperature. Nothing on the outside can tell you. It's a common mistake by new IT people in the data closet to think that keeping the air cool will keep the servers cool.

                            it is a good point, i should implement a monitoring software to get that info

                            Does your server have an out of band management software? Most do if it is Dell iDRAC if it is HP iLO. They should report temperatures from their web interface.

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                              Reid Cooper @IT-ADMIN
                              last edited by

                              @IT-ADMIN start by using the tools on the servers. Any "real" server will have this monitoring already, you just need to log into the server and look at it.

                              What kind of servers do you have?

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                                IT-ADMIN @Reid Cooper
                                last edited by

                                @Reid-Cooper said:

                                @IT-ADMIN start by using the tools on the servers. Any "real" server will have this monitoring already, you just need to log into the server and look at it.

                                What kind of servers do you have?

                                Dell poweredge T310

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                                  Reid Cooper
                                  last edited by

                                  That should have an iDrac I think. Log into that and see if the temps are displayed.

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                                    IT-ADMIN @Reid Cooper
                                    last edited by

                                    @Reid-Cooper said:

                                    That should have an iDrac I think. Log into that and see if the temps are displayed.

                                    how i can access that, i never notice this

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                                      Reid Cooper @IT-ADMIN
                                      last edited by

                                      @IT-ADMIN generally setting up your iDrac is the first step in installing a Dell server (or ILO for an HP, IPMI for SuperMicro, etc.) I don't know the T310 specifically, but likely you will need to set up access for it in the BIOS. The iDRAC will have its own IP address and should be accessible from a web browser.

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                                        IT-ADMIN @Reid Cooper
                                        last edited by

                                        @Reid-Cooper said:

                                        @IT-ADMIN generally setting up your iDrac is the first step in installing a Dell server (or ILO for an HP, IPMI for SuperMicro, etc.) I don't know the T310 specifically, but likely you will need to set up access for it in the BIOS. The iDRAC will have its own IP address and should be accessible from a web browser.

                                        unfortunately it is not me who set up this server in the first time. so i don't know anything about that 😞

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                                          Jason Banned @Reid Cooper
                                          last edited by

                                          @Reid-Cooper said:

                                          @IT-ADMIN generally setting up your iDrac is the first step in installing a Dell server (or ILO for an HP, IPMI for SuperMicro, etc.) I don't know the T310 specifically, but likely you will need to set up access for it in the BIOS. The iDRAC will have its own IP address and should be accessible from a web browser.

                                          Most of the newer ones can be configured from the front panel LCD without even messing with the BIOS or Idrac/Lifecycle controller settings on the server.

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                                            IT-ADMIN @Jason
                                            last edited by

                                            @Jason said:

                                            @Reid-Cooper said:

                                            @IT-ADMIN generally setting up your iDrac is the first step in installing a Dell server (or ILO for an HP, IPMI for SuperMicro, etc.) I don't know the T310 specifically, but likely you will need to set up access for it in the BIOS. The iDRAC will have its own IP address and should be accessible from a web browser.

                                            Most of the newer ones can be configured from the front panel LCD without even messing with the BIOS or Idrac/Lifecycle controller settings on the server.

                                            unfortunately i don't have LCD on my server
                                            what is strange is on their website they show LCD but in reality there is no LCD (just marketing) or maybe i have an old generation

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