Power, thermal, acoustic, Power efficiencies, Main power supply – Dell POWEREDGE R610 User Manual
Page 21: Figure 7, Power supplies, 5 power, thermal, acoustic, 1 power efficiencies, 2 main power supply
Dell
PowerEdge R610 Technical Guide
21
5 Power, Thermal, Acoustic
5.1 Power Efficiencies
One of the main features of the 11G family of servers is enhanced power efficiency. The R610
achieves higher power efficiency by implementing the following features:
User-selectable power cap (subsystems throttle to maintain the specified power cap)
Improved power budgeting
Power-supply and voltage-regulator (VR) efficiency improvements
Use of switching regulators instead of linear regulators
Closed-loop thermal throttling
Increased rear venting and 3D venting
Pulse-width modulated (PWM) fans with an increased number of fan zones and configuration-
dependent fan speeds
Use of DDR3 memory (lower voltage compared to DDR2, UDIMM)
Processor VR dynamic phase shedding
Memory VR static phase shedding
Random time interval for system start
Ability for an entire rack to power on without exceeding the available power
BIOS Power/Performance options page
Active Power Controller (BIOS-based CPU P-state manager)
Ability to power down or throttle memory
Ability to disable a processor core
Ability to turn off embedded NICs or PCIe lanes when not being used
Option to run PCIe at Gen1 speeds instead of Gen2
5.2 Main Power Supply
The base redundant R610 system consists of two hot-plug 502W Energy Smart (energy efficient)
power supplies in a 1+1 configuration. A 717W high-output power supply is also available.
The power supplies connect directly to the planar. There is a power cable to connect between the
planar and the backplane. The R610 power supplies do not have embedded cooling fans; they are
cooled only by the system cooling fans.
Field replaceable unit (FRU) data is stored in the memory of the power supply microcontroller.
Additionally, the power supply firmware can be updated by the iDRAC over the PMBus.
In a single power supply configuration, the power supply is installed in PS1 location and a power
supply blank (metal cover) is installed in PS2 location for proper system cooling.
Figure 7. Power Supplies