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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
Installing Polaris datacentre generators: Photos

By Suzanne Tindal, ZDNet.com.au
October 17, 2008
URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/hardware/soa/Installing-Polaris-datacentre-generators-Photos/0,130061702,339292688,00.htm


Yesterday workers installed six 22 tonne diesel power generators into one of Australia's largest datacentres prior to prepare it for its official opening early next year.

Installing Polaris datacentre generators: Photos

The $220 million Polaris datacentre in Springfield, Queensland, will house enterprise organisations including Suncorp, NEC and Fujitsu together with Queensland government departments and councils, including its service provider CITEC. It has 6,999 square metres of raised floor space.

Standing before the building is Mike Andrea, datacentre design specialist and director of Strategic Directions, which carried out the City of Springfields master ICT plan.

Installing Polaris datacentre generators: Photos

The generators, which spring into action in the case of mains failure, were lifted in to the fifth floor. Raising four took three and a half hours.

(Credit: Paul Riley)

Installing Polaris datacentre generators: Photos

The generators can start up in three seconds. For the time between failure and startup, kinetic energy from flywheels spun up using mains power is used to keep the generator running. From mains failure the flywheel gives 16 seconds of power.

Using a flywheel removes the requirement of batteries for the time until generators start up, saving the data centre 300 square metres of floor space, Andrea said.

"People might say 'Holy hell' what if [the generator] doesn't start," he said, referring to the short 16 seconds of time the flywheel gives. However, the datacentre had two more generators than it needed, he said, and added that if generator genuinely wouldn't start, the ten minutes provided by the batteries datacentres normally have wouldn't be enough anyway.

When there was a brown out, or a time when less mains power was available than usual, energy from the flywheel could be used to make up the difference, Andrea said. If the brown out lasted longer than seven or eight seconds, it was treated like a black out, with generators springing into motion.

(Credit: Paul Riley)


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