electrobuzz
Member
- Location
- Portland, OR
Is there anything in the code that will not allow transformers to be inside a conditioned I.T. room?
Thanks
Thanks
It is not in the NEC. But I am told that the BICSI rules forbid it. It would interfere with the operation of the IT equipment. If you have an electrical room immediately adjacent to an IT room, you should not put transformers on the wall that separates the two rooms.
How is that possible? Transformers are often built into PDU/UPS's in IT rooms.
The transformer inside a PDU would be much smaller and less likely to cause interference with IT loads.
If given the choice, why would you want to add all those BTU's to the cooling load of the room?
Voltage drop and circuit routing.If given the choice, why would you want to add all those BTU's to the cooling load of the room?
Voltage drop and circuit routing.
If given the choice, why would you want to add all those BTU's to the cooling load of the room?
Conductors can be sized larger for voltage drop.
Because it is typically the one room in a space that has space for a transformer. It is also usually a transformer dedicated for the IT space so it is somewhat logical to be there.
If given the choice, why would you want to add all those BTU's to the cooling load of the room?
That does not answer the question of why add to the cooling load.
Why is this any different from a hazardous location or a corrosive environment and maybe placing some equipment in a room or area that is outside the environment for other logical reasons cost, performance, operating cost ...
In the IT room or not it adds cooling load to the building, either way the cooling load must be accounted for.
Why do you think an IT room is special?
We install transformers, panelboards, UPS units, switchgear, ATS etc in IT rooms.
As with everything it is a trade off, take up space in the IT room or keep the runs short.
Add heat to the IT room or have to walk down the hall to flip breakers.
It is all just a design decision.
If given the choice, why would you want to add all those BTU's to the cooling load of the room?
It also does not necessarily need to be in the room to keep runs short. Just outside the room is still shorter than at the source that may be 20, 50, or several hundred feet away.