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There is a difference between 'rated' and 'running' and 'starting' draw. Normally the 'rated' is the maximum. Motors starting draw a LOT more than they do when running (like fans, disk, etc). If you use a 'clamp on amp meter', you can read this. At one time Radio Shack had a cheap clamp on amp meter with a RS-232 adapter. It worked like a champ, and wasn't that expensive. I think it was made by Fluke. <story warning> When helping set up a server room once, we had to go back and re-strap all the SCSI disk drives (80 or so), so they used the 'startup delay'. This means they would wait a few seconds times the SCSI ID, so not all drives would start at once. It saved us needing to add a lot more power to the room. </story warning> Or, do an inventory of your equipment and go to the mfg web site and check the power requirements listed there! ... Hope it helps! ... jack Jerry Feldman wrote: > Over the weekend our company rack lost power. We're currently running > 6 servers + kvm + switch. Right now I've got the 2 big 6U 4-CPU > servers running on separate circuits, and the other units running on > another circuit. > > Is there a way to find the approximate power draw from the software > (RHEL 4). > I'm just lazy and don't want to get in the back of the rack with a > flashlight to read the power supply data. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > Discuss-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org > http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss >
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