jmb wrote:adam2 wrote:oilslick wrote:Computer data centres are pretty important these days. Will they try and keep them up and running?
I doubt that computer data centers will get any special treatment, remember that almost every grid district will contain a data center, or a home kidney machine, or a hospital, or something else important.
Data centers SHOULD have both UPS and diesel backup already, [...]
This is from the
Telehouse spec for the Docklands facility - which may be the gold standard which other data centres will fail to match:
6 independent 11kv three phase electrical supplies are provided from 3 separate national grid substations. Standby Generation is provided at N+1 redundancy via diesel engine driven generators.
On-site fuel is stored to maintain full load operation for all generator sets for continuous running of 24 hours. Back up deliveries are available from diverse supply depots.
Uninterruptible Power Supply System (UPS) is available to provide N+1 redundancy for critical computer supplies. The UPS can support the facility for 15 minutes at full load, whilst switching to alternate supply, or standby generation start-up/synchronisation takes place.
Now, I don't know how "grid districts" correspond to "grid substations", are these precise and comparable terminology?
-jmb
A grid district is usually understood to mean one high voltage circuit at 33 or 66KV that supplies a number of 11KV ring mains that in turn supply small substations that step down from 11KV to 230/400 volts for use.
It must said that the term is used somwhat caually and may mean different things to different engineers.
"Grid substation" is generally understood to mean a substation connected directly to the high voltage national grid system, and not to a local substation that steps down from 11KV to 230/400 volts.
The arrangements for the data center reffered to above sound impresive, and IF they work as intended should give good protection against breakdowns/accidents/failures.
As regards planned rota power cuts, I dont think anyone knows what would happen, large data centers were almost unknown last time.
IF the multiple 11KV supplies refered to above come from the same grid district, then they would be dependant on UPS and generator backup during rota cuts.
If however the multiple 11KV supplies come from different grid areas than they should be protected.The biq question is would they be allowed to switch supplies in order to "get round" rota cuts ? or would this be regarded as cheating when "babies and grannies are going cold"
Last time we had rota power cuts, some essiential trades and industries were exempted, this applied only to very large consumers with a dedicated high voltage grid connection.
It was not feasible to exempt essiential users connected to the local distribution network.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"