UCoustic™ Customer Comments
National Board of Chiropractic Examiners David, Overall we are very pleased. Feel free to pass this information along to others that are thinking of purchasing. If you would like I could also send some pictures of the rack. We are actually considering the smaller, half-rack, size for our network switches. Could you send me a quote for that? I will also need a spec sheet so I can see if they will work for us as well. Tango Networks Inc. - TX - Update 30 days later Here's an update 30 days after the install: We have six rows of cubicles in our Engineering area. I have one UCoustic24U cabinet in a cubicle in each row. They fit nicely behind the cubicle walls and are hardly noticeable. We have populated the racks even more densely than I previously reported: 23u with doors closed and no heat problems. Our office is a very large open floor and very few walls (air circulates well) and ambient temp is about 69 degree F. Tango Networks Inc. - TX Testing results: We populated the cabinet with 12 servers, dual core processors running at 75% load (high transaction rate) and experienced no temperature issues and very dramatic noise reduction (specifically at the higher frequencies which are noticeable by humans). We continued adding servers and eventually populated to 24 U (total of 20 servers = 18 1U servers + 2 2U servers), dual core processors running at 75% load (high transaction rate) and experienced a higher temperature than we wanted (i.e. the temperature was higher than we liked but still we had no server failures). We did notice that by leaving the back doors slightly opened the temperatures fell back down to a tolerable range with only a slight increase in noise levels (i.e. leaving the back door cracked open still dropped the noise levels considerably). Comparison to competition: We believe that your product stacks up very favorably against others that we reviewed. The Rackmount Solutions cabinet is cheaper, dissipates more heat, and suppresses more sound. Chuck Derrick Young and Franklin - NY Although I am busy I do not mind a phone call from a prospective customer if you are in a sales situation and they are questioning results that they may incur. But keep the phone number off the web. We are happy! Bill Wyman, Seven-Tel Systems, Inc., University of Colorado as sent to University IT staff. Hi All— If you have not done so already, please do stop by Room 1B 20 and check out the new Ucoustic server enclosure. After I moved all of the equipment into it and closed it up last evening, it was so quiet that the sound generated by the room air-handling system and the fans of the student desktop systems in the room was clearly audible. Acoustically, it performs as advertised. Thermally, this thing looks like magic to me. The UPS, which was operating at an internal temperature of about 85 degrees at its old location (outside of and behind the old server cabinet), is operating this morning at 74 degrees in its new location (inside the enclosure along with both servers which are running). Yet the server enclosure includes no cooling system—no pump or liquid coolant or coils—just two ordinary, thermostatically controlled muffin-type fans. Maybe an engineer can explain it. Cheers, Bill Bill had more to say when we said thank you for his comments... Hi Tim, Your reply is speedy. Feel free to use my comments on your website, including the ones in this email. ... I am knowingly--and happily--inviting visitors to your site to figure out how to contact me. No problem with that at all. Every now and then a product comes along . . . I’ll add that before I purchased the Ucoustic, I described its properties, as you and the owner’s manual had explained them, to a facilities engineer in the College of Engineering who has a good 30 years experience dealing with electrical, electronic, and computer equipment of all kinds. He was willing to take the noise-reduction claims at face value. When I went on to describe the thermal-reduction and regulation claims, he got very quiet, and then said: “I don’t see how that is possible.” I didn’t either. I still don’t, but the Ucoustic does indeed do what the specs say it will do. The College of Engineering has been wrestling for 3 years with how to provide a large, traditional, climate-controlled room for servers—a shared facility which could house the many servers owned by its dozen or so departments and programs. “There’s not enough space for all the server rooms we need, so let’s pool our resources (or the lack thereof) and get the College to do it.” Great idea, but then come even bigger problems: the unavailability of a very large space in already overcrowded buildings, renovation costs, capital equipment costs, energy costs, maintenance and upkeep costs, along with all the issues involved in administering any shared facility: authority, responsibility, security, access, recurring user fees, and on and on. I will offer to show anybody the Ucoustic, and let it speak for itself. Bill Wyman. PC and MacExchange Dennis Laing |
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