10 Power Saving Myths Debunked

Added 1st Nov 2008
By Logan G. Harbaugh

Article Highlights

  • Efficiency is measured in percentage of power converted, which can range from 50 to 90 percent or more
  • Tailoring the server configuration to the software you'll be running can save energy without resorting to extreme measures
  • The average 17-inch LCD monitor consumes 35 watts of electricity.
  • Powering a laptop off doesn't necessarily reduce power usage to zero

Companies are finding themselves embroiled in a power crisis as they struggle to find ways to rein in soaring energy costs - as well as do their part to address global

climate change. However, how can you be certain that the power-saving strategies your company has adopted are, in fact, the best ones? After all, there are plenty of myths out there about saving energy that are patently false. We examine 10 such myths and bring the truth to light.

 

1 Powering a PC or server up and down limits its life because the extreme temperature and current swings of power cycling can stress electronic components.

 

“How can you be certain that the power-saving strategies your company has adopted are, in fact, the best ones?”

Fact: Power cycling healthy electronics is not a source of stress. The same electrical components that are used in IT equipment are used in complex devices that are routinely subjected to power cycles and temperature extremes, such as factory-floor automation, medical devices, and your car. There is a kernel of truth in this myth, however: cycling power on a sick system is going to bring attention to latent component weaknesses that go unnoticed in operation. Power-on diagnostics

are brief yet rigorous and can be performed remotely on servers with dedicated management controllers. Power cycling doesn't just save energy. It's a zero-cost aid to maximizing server availability.

 

2 It takes too long to cold-start servers to react to spikes in demand in a hot market. If customers are made to wait, they'll go elsewhere.


Fact: Idling servers at zero workload as hot spares is an egregious waste of energy and an administrative burden. If customers need to wait while you spin up cold spares to handle rising workload, brag about it. For a Web site, put up a static page asking users to wait while additional resources are brought online. As for the wait, people will stay on hold if they know their call will be answered. Build power

management into your services architecture and make it part of the message that you send to users and customers. You can also select systems that cold-boot rapidly. Model to model and brand to brand, servers exhibit wide variances in

power-up delay. This metric isn't usually measured, but it becomes relevant when you control power consumption by switching off system power. It needn't take long. Servers or blades that boot from a snapshot, a copy of RAM loaded from disk or a SAN can go from power-down mode to work-ready in less than a minute. The most efficient members of a reserve/disaster farm can quiescence in a suspend-to-RAM state rather than be powered down fully so that wake-up does not require BIOS self-test or device querying and cataloging, two major sources of boot delay.

 

 

3 The power rating (in watts) of a CPU is a simple measurement of the system's efficiency. The higher the number of watts the better.


Fact: Efficiency is measured in percentage of power converted, which can range from 50 to 90 percent or more. The AC power not converted to DC is lost as heat, which increases cooling needs, adding even more to the overall energy loss. Unfortunately, it's often difficult to tell the efficiency of a power supply, and many manufacturers don't publish the number. You can measure the actual power draw of various systems at idle and full load to make your decision.

 

4 It's better to pack one big server with all the RAM, CPUs, and peripherals it can hold rather than to use multiple smaller servers.

Fact: This is only true if the big server is fully utilized, which can be dangerous with critical applications. Multiple smaller servers can be powered off or put in suspend mode when not in use, and they are safer from a redundancy point of view. Also, stuffing as many CPU cores and RAM as a system will hold will result in a system that uses substantially more power than a base configuration of one dual-core CPU and a modest amount of RAM. Tailoring the server configuration to the software you'll be running can save energy without resorting to extreme measures.

 

5 LCD monitors use a trivial amount of power, so you mightas well leave them on. Also, their colors and backlightbrightness improve with warm-up time.


Fact:
The average 17-inch LCD monitor consumes 35 watts of electricity. Adding together the hundreds of LCDs in an enterprise, the power used may not be that trivial. Energy Star LCD monitors will power down to sleep mode if the PCs' power management software is set up to tell them to. This saves energy and cash - between US$10 (about Rs 400) and $40 (about Rs 1,600) per year, according to

Energy Star - though not as much as simply turning the monitor off when it isn't in use. Even with the monitor turned off, an LCD's power supply will use between 1 and 3 watts of power. The only way to get it to zero is to unplug the power supply. As for warm-up times, they are much shorter than they used to be: LCDs with LED backlighting rather than fluorescent don't need any warm-up time at all.

 

6 A notebook doesn't use any power when it's suspended or sleeping. USB devices charge from the notebook's AC adapter.


Fact: Sleep (in Vista) or Hibernate mode in XP saves the state of the system to RAM and then maintains the RAM image even when the rest of the system is shut down. Suspend saves the state of the system to hard disk, which reduces boot time greatly and allows the system to shut down. Sleeping continues to draw a small amount of power, between 1 and 3 watts, even if the system seems inactive. By comparison, Suspend draws less than 1 watt. Even over the course of a year, this difference is probably negligible. Powering a laptop off doesn't necessarily reduce power usage

to zero. This is easily confirmed by touching the power supply of a laptop that has been powered off for a while; it'll still be warm. Unless you unplug the power supply, it still burns energy.

 

  • Page 1 : 10 Power Saving Myths Debunked
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