01-16-2012 05:15 PM - edited 03-07-2019 04:22 AM
Hello everyone! I am curious what everyone does in their standard client access
switch closet, do you have UPS's in every closet or do you have nice surge suppressors
to protect your client access switches?
Sent from Cisco Technical Support iPad App
Solved! Go to Solution.
01-17-2012 07:00 AM
Have a centralised ups feeding all the network switches located in different closets
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01-17-2012 03:42 PM
shocke@culver.org wrote:
Hello everyone! I am curious what everyone does in their standard client access
switch closet, do you have UPS's in every closet or do you have nice surge suppressors
to protect your client access switches?
Sent from Cisco Technical Support iPad App
How big is your network, and how much money do you have to spend?
I've most recently been working on data-center sized networks, and they tend to be covered by large, center-wide UPS's with generator backup - the UPS and associated rectifiers isolate the protected kit from any chance of surges, so they're not needed on a rack-by-rack basis.
That's not a viable option for a smaller network or client base, so you sometimes need to think outside the box - one place I'm working on has two racks, one large UPS in the bottom of one rack and a PDU for each rack running the essential hardware (switches, servers, not monitors or non essential stuff) running off the one UPS.
There's no one size fits all solution - if you have widely distributed network closets/racks and don't want to put a UPS in each rack, your best bet might be getting switches with redundant power supplies and ensuring each supply runs off a separate electrical phase - since a lot of power outages only affect one phase at a time, you can often survive brief otuages on the secondary supply until the primary is restored.
Cheers
01-18-2012 02:21 AM
All of our switches have UPS.
01-17-2012 07:00 AM
Have a centralised ups feeding all the network switches located in different closets
Sent from Cisco Technical Support iPhone App
01-17-2012 03:42 PM
shocke@culver.org wrote:
Hello everyone! I am curious what everyone does in their standard client access
switch closet, do you have UPS's in every closet or do you have nice surge suppressors
to protect your client access switches?
Sent from Cisco Technical Support iPad App
How big is your network, and how much money do you have to spend?
I've most recently been working on data-center sized networks, and they tend to be covered by large, center-wide UPS's with generator backup - the UPS and associated rectifiers isolate the protected kit from any chance of surges, so they're not needed on a rack-by-rack basis.
That's not a viable option for a smaller network or client base, so you sometimes need to think outside the box - one place I'm working on has two racks, one large UPS in the bottom of one rack and a PDU for each rack running the essential hardware (switches, servers, not monitors or non essential stuff) running off the one UPS.
There's no one size fits all solution - if you have widely distributed network closets/racks and don't want to put a UPS in each rack, your best bet might be getting switches with redundant power supplies and ensuring each supply runs off a separate electrical phase - since a lot of power outages only affect one phase at a time, you can often survive brief otuages on the secondary supply until the primary is restored.
Cheers
01-18-2012 02:21 AM
All of our switches have UPS.
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