T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2964.1 | you can mix power supplies - you just don't get extra power | NETCAD::MILLBRANDT | answer mam | Thu Nov 09 1995 09:19 | 27 |
| From the DEChub V4.1 release notes:
New power supplies are available for the DEChub 900 MultiSwitch.
The new power supply, part number H7894, can deliver 163 watts
of power. It is shipped with all new DEChub900 MultiSwitch hubs.
The previous power supply, H7890, delivered 140 watts. Release
V4.1.0 and higher of the DEChub 900 MultiSwitch firmware can utilize
the additional power in its power allocation algorithm in some
configurations.
Please read Section 5 of the DEChub 900 MultiSwitch Owner's Manual
to see how a power budget is calculated from the power supplies
present in a hub, and how power supply redundancy is handled. The
power budget allocated by the DEChub 900 MultiSwitch for each
power supply depends on the mix of H7894 and H7890 power supplies,
and on the version of firmware. The following chart shows how many
watts of power per power supply are calculated in the power budget.
Hub Manager Power Supply Configuration Budgeted Power
Version per Supply
------------------ -------------------------- --------------
V4.0.x and earlier any 140 watts
V4.1.0 all H7890 power supplies 140 watts
V4.1.0 mix of H7890 and H7894 140 watts
V4.1.0 all H7894 power supplies 163 watts
|
2964.2 | They'll work just fine. HUBwatch may report... | JULIET::HARRIS_MA | Sales Executive II | Thu Nov 09 1995 14:10 | 10 |
| RE :-.0
I thinbk the answer is YOU CAN MIX power supplies, but the power
calculations in HUBwatch *MAY* fall back to the 140W defaults if you
have mixed supplies. If you have ALL H7894's then I think it will be
correct.
MIXED supplies WILL work however...
Mark
|
2964.3 | Plug em in, mix them, they all work fine..... | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Fri Nov 10 1995 09:13 | 17 |
| Yes yes yes you *can* mix both types. Mark is correct, having
a mix of H7890's and H7894's will only limit you in the total
wattage that can be allocated. No other restriction in terms
of hot swapping out or in of a mixed group of power supplies
will be seen. There are no other known problems in terms of
compatibility of the two types of power supplies that would
prevent them from being mixed in the same HUB. I have 6 HUBs
that I have configured with mixed power supplies and there is
no problem other than that they all default to the 140w allocation.
My HUB configs aren't anywheres max'd out so there are no restrictions
visible.
Not to worry, your customers do not have to unecessarily trade in their
current H7890's for H7894's. You customers should have to be concerned
about needing all H7894's if their current hub configs dictate needing
the extra power allocation.
Bob
|
2964.4 | How close to the edge is ok.....?? | SCCAT::MILLER | | Mon Jan 15 1996 18:38 | 5 |
| How close to the limit should the new supplies/power allocation be
pushed for reliable operation? I have a customer who wants to put 2
900EF's and 6 PEswitches in a hub (comes to 438 watts, 69a @ 5v, and
7.2a @ 15v) with 4 H7894's. Is this ok, or should I convince him to
expand to another hub?
|
2964.5 | It should work, as far as I can tell.... | NETCAD::BATTERSBY | | Tue Jan 16 1996 10:14 | 17 |
| Well, the 4th power supply doesn't figure into the picture until
one of the other 3 goes down. Only 3 power supplies are actively
figured into the power budget at any time, and the 4th one is in
stand-by as a backup. So the maximum power available for modules
(at 163w each), is 489 watts minus 15w (for the HUB MAM module)
for +5v. So that's 474 watts of +5v for the 8 backplane slots.
I'm not going to bother figuring the 15v at this time.
So it looks like with your configuration at 438 watts, it should
be fine with 4 H7894's (one as backup). It's my understanding that
3 H7894's will supply a true 489 watts. There's probably some actual
head room for what the power supplies can provide. It's the allocation
algorythm which sets the limit at 489 watts of +5v, not what the
power supplies can probably provide. So as long as you have some
combination of modules which need 474 watts of +5v or less, the way
I see it, it should be configurable in a hub with 4 H7894's.
Bob
|
2964.6 | Works fine | JULIET::HARRIS_MA | Sales Executive II | Wed Jan 17 1996 02:19 | 7 |
| RE: .last 2
I just had the exact same config come up at Oracle and I did the +5,
+12 and Total watts calculations for the H7894's. Works just fine.
Mark
|
2964.7 | Should be Fine | NETCAD::B_MACARTHUR | | Wed Jan 17 1996 10:39 | 12 |
| I'll add that when we did the qualification testing on the new
H7894 supply, we had hubs running at 489 watts (some even slightly
higher) at 50 degrees C for many weeks. This testing was done with
a mixed set of H7890 and H7894 supplies. Yes, we pushed the H7890's
to a power output similar to the H7894 for this test. I don't see
any reason that you can't use the HUB to it's power limit of 489 watts
for three H7894's or to 420 watts for a mix of H7890's and H7894's.
If the MAM let's you power up the system after allocating power, then
you should have no problems running it that way indefinitely.
Regards,
Bob
|
2964.8 | Sound good.... | SCCAT::MILLER | | Wed Jan 17 1996 13:30 | 1 |
| Thanks - I'll tell them to let it bu....uh.. fly ;-)
|