Archives


- Beowulf
- Beowulf Announce
- Scyld-users
- Beowulf on Debian

Liquid cooling?

Many of your questions may have already been answered in earlier discussions or in the FAQ. The search results page will indicate current discussions as well as past list serves, articles, and papers.

Search

Robert G. Brown rgb at phy.duke.edu
Wed Apr 24 10:49:03 PDT 2002


On 24 Apr 2002, John Hearns wrote:

> On Wed, 2002-04-24 at 15:10, Worsham, Michael A. wrote:
> > Has anyone attempting to create a beowulf cluster using extreme methods of
> > cooling, such as the liquid cooling?
> > 
> > Example sites: http://www.koolance.com/, http://www.senfu.com.tw/, &
> > http://www.overclockershideout.com/
> > 
> 
> Well, I think Robert Brown has FINALLY been beaten here.
> You're not going to install Freon tanks, complete with plastic
> fish are you Bob? 
> I just have this bizarre vision of Bob in an aqualung visiting
> a Freon-flooded machine room...

Oh no, this has all been discussed before on the list before (many
times, actually -- look back at the archives with google to find some of
them) and MY favorite solution is to build a really large computer room
in, say, Antarctica and just put fans in the windows.

Liquid solutions (no pun intended:-) tend to be expensive, messy,
environmentally nasty (if you don't use water), risky (water and
electricity don't mix well) and, as you note, servicing the machines in
a full immersion rack can be, well, "involved".

;-)

   rgb

-- 
Robert G. Brown	                       http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/
Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305
Durham, N.C. 27708-0305
Phone: 1-919-660-2567  Fax: 919-660-2525     email:rgb at phy.duke.edu






More information about the Beowulf mailing list