Dell PowerEdge T620 Technical Manual page 36

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temperature sensors, including processors, hard disk drives, DIMMs, storage cards, and the inlet
ambient temperature. The thermal control also detects and responds to hardware configuration.
The thermal management adjusts 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.
Environmental specifications: The optimized thermal management makes the T620 reliable
under a wide range of operating environments. Many configurations are compliant in expanded
operating temperature environments, but a few are not. For environmental specifications and for
configuration limitations on expanded operating temperature environments, see Table 30 in
Appendix A.
Acoustical design
The acoustical design of the PowerEdge T620 reflects the following:
Quiet library acoustics: The PowerEdge T620 is quiet enough for a library when minimally
configured or quiet enough for an office setting in a typical configuration.
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, hums, and so on. One of the sound quality metrics in the Dell specification is
prominence ratio of a tone, which is listed in Table 21.
Configurable for low acoustics: The following are configuration considerations you should
make if acoustics are important to you:
Storage devices:
Because hard drive noise scales with spindle speed, the quietest option for rotational
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storage media is a 7200-rpm SATA drive. The loudest option is a 15k SAS drive.
Solid-state drives are even quieter than rotational drives because they have no sound
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associated with spinning.
Noise levels increase with the quantity of hard drives; using fewer hard drives will have a
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lower acoustical output.
PCIe SSD cards, such as Fusion-io, require more airflow for cooling, resulting in
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significantly higher noise levels.
Redundant fans: Fan noise from the non-redundant, two-fan system is lower than that of the
redundant, six-fan system.
Impacts of cards:
Quantity of PCIe cards: When more than two PCIe cards are installed, the system fan
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speed/noise level will be higher.
Types of PCIe cards: The fan speed/noise level will be higher if a GPU and PERC H710 is
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installed.
System Profile settings in BIOS and Thermal settings in 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.
RAID Setup with PERC H310: A system configured as non-RAID will have a higher noise level
than a system configured as RAID.
Noise ramp and descent during bootup from power off: Fan speed noise levels ramp during
the boot process (from power off to power on) to add a layer of protection for component
36
PowerEdge T620 Technical Guide

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