Open Rack is an Open Compute Project standard for a new rack and power delivery architecture and an efficient, scaleable alternative to the EIA-310 rack. It differs from the traditional EIA-310 19" rack in that it was designed specifically for large scale cloud deployments. There are 4 key features that make this rack design more efficient to deploy, support, and operate. The power to the all of the compute, storage, or network devices are supplied by a pair of bus bars located in the rear of the rack. The bus bars are powered by a shelf of rectifiers which provides phase balance, resiliency, and high efficient AC-to-DC conversion. The IT equipment that fits into Open Rack is 21" or 538mm wide. This is a 15% increase in frontal area are provides more airflow to the IT devices enabling the data center to reduce cooling cost. The vertical spacing is also taller to accommodate better airflow and structurally better enclosures that do no sag and interface with adjacent equipment. All of the cables and interconnects are made from the front of the rack and the IT equipment is hot-pluggable and service from the front of the rack. Service personnel no longer access the rear of the rack or need to work in the hot aisle.
Video Open Rack
Specification
OpenU
Open Rack rack units are called OpenU or just OU. An Open Rack consists of three modular zones: power, equipment, and cable.
Physically, OU cabinets maintain the same 24" external width as traditional server cabinets to maintain compatibility with existing server infrastructure. However, an OpenU is slightly taller, to improve airflow and cable management.
Power Zones
Equipment Bay
An Equipment Bay is 21" or 538 mm wide. An equipment bay rests on support shelves and blind-mates with the power supply through bus bars.
Maps Open Rack
External links
- Reference specifications and designs.
- Rack & Power section of Open Compute Project website.
References
Source of article : Wikipedia