Page 37 - Dell PowerEdge R620 Technical Guide
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cooling according to what the system really needs, and draws lower fan power draw and
              generates lower acoustical noise levels than servers without such controls.
              User-configurable settings: An R620 thermal control design target is to minimize the
              contribution of fan power to overall system power. However, with the understanding and
              realization that every customer has a unique set of circumstances or expectations of the system,
              in this generation of servers, we are introducing limited user-configurable settings in the iDRAC7
              BIOS setup screen. For more information, see the Dell PowerEdge R620 Owner’s Manual on
              Support.Dell.com/Manuals and “Advanced Thermal Control: Optimizing across Environments and
              Power Goals” on Dell.com.
              Cooling redundancy: The R620 allows continuous operation with a fan failure in the system.
              Environmental specifications: The optimized thermal management makes the R620 reliable
              under a wide range of operating environments as shown in the environmental specifications in
              Table 33. Many configurations are also compliant under expanded operating temperature
              environments, but a few are not.



            The acoustical design of the PowerEdge R620 reflects the following:

              Versatility: The PowerEdge R620 saves you power draw in the data center, but it also is quiet
              enough for the office environment in typical and minimum configurations. Compare the values
              for L pA in Table 23 for these configurations and note that they are lower than ambient
              measurements of typical office environments.
              Adherence to Dell’s high sound quality standards: Sound quality is different from sound power
              level and sound pressure level in that it describes how humans respond to annoyances in sound,
              like whistles and hums. One of the sound quality metrics in the Dell specification is prominence
              ratio of a tone, which is listed in Table 23.
              Noise ramp and descent during bootup from power off: Fan speeds and noise levels ramp during
              the boot process (from power off to power on) in order to add a layer of protection for
              component cooling in the case that the system were not to boot properly. To keep bootup as
              quiet as possible, the fan speed reached during bootup is limited to about half of full speed.
              Noise level dependencies: If acoustics is important to you, you may want to make the following
              configuration choices and settings for the PowerEdge R620 because they result in quieter
              operation:
               —  iDRAC7 BIOS settings: Performance Per Watt (DAPC or OS) may be quieter than Performance
                   or Dense Configuration (iDRAC Settings > Thermal > Max. Exhaust Temperature or Fan speed
                   offset)
               —  Hot spare feature of power supply unit: In system default setting, the Hot Spare Feature is
                   disabled; acoustical output from the power supplies is lowest in this setting
               —  Hard drive noise is highly dependent on spindle speed; a 7200 rpm SATA hard drive has the
                   quietest hard drive operation and a 15k SAS hard drive has the loudest
               However, some components cause significant but not necessarily intuitive increases in loudness
               when they are installed in the R620. Contributors to acoustical output can include:
               —  PCIe SSD cards (such as Fusion-io)
               —  GPUs
               —  Express Flash PCIe SSDs
               —  10Gb NIC
               —  Number of installed processors
               —  Number of installed PCIe cards
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