Integral Coupling, the Busway & More Highlighted in New Anord Mardix Report

Sept. 28, 2020
The busway. From starting within the automotive industry in the 1930’s and now evolving to widespread use in data centers, the technology has made its place. A new report from Anord Mardix focused on busways aims to contextualize that evolution and present a fresh approach for 2020 and further. According to the company, “busway offers a high density, flexible power distribution solution for many applications.”

The busway. From starting within the automotive industry in the 1930’s and now evolving to widespread use in data centers, the power distribution technology has made its place.

Get the full report.

A new report from Anord Mardix aims to contextualize that evolution and present a fresh approach for 2020 and further. According to the company, “busway offers a high density, flexible power distribution solution for many applications.”

In recent years, according to the new report, the use of open channel busway has become the norm.

The open channel construction allows the plug-in (or tap off) sub-distribution units to be placed, theoretically, at any location along the busway,  Anord Mardix says. What does this do?

“This enables the sub-feed to be positioned directly above or adjacent to its respective load, which in a data center environment would generally be the server cabinet,” the report states.

But first, it goes through traditional coupling, which one of the requirements is to couple together multiple sections of busway of up to 10-12ft in length to form the overall required length of busway.

“Designing safety directly into the components being installed on live busway can’t be overemphasized.”

And the challenge with open channel busway systems?

They do allow the ability for the installer to plug-in unit at any location along the busway … “in theory,” says Anord Mardix, but the company also states a potential challenge: The theory being that the power feed to the server rack or item of equipment can be located directly above or adjacent for ease of identification. However, the couplers present an issue to this theoretical management of the plug-in units.”

The report explores an approach called “integral coupling.”

Anord Mardix describes this tech via its Anord Mardix Databar busway, which according to the report “utilizes a unique male and female coupling system that is integral to the individual busway sections. The key component of this system is the beryllium copper spring couplers attached to the female end of each busway section.”

The report also covers the potential safety benefits and elements of the technology. Designing safety directly into the components being installed on live busway can’t be overemphasized, the report highlights.

Download the full report, “Busway: Safety and Reliability,” courtesy of Anord Mardix, to read further on fresh ways to integrate the busway into modern data centers.

Sponsored Recommendations

Optimizing AI Infrastructure: The Critical Role of Liquid Cooling

In this executive brief, we discuss the growing need for liquid cooling in data centers due to the increasing power demands of AI and high-performance computing. Discover how ...

AI-Driven Data Centers: Revolutionizing Decarbonization Strategies

AI hype has put data centers in the spotlight, sparking concerns over energy use—but they’re also key to a greener future. With renewable power and cutting-edge cooling, data ...

Bending the Energy Curve: Decoupling Digitalization Trends from Data Center Energy Growth

After a decade of stability, data center energy consumption is now set to surge—but can we change the trajectory? Discover how small efficiency gains could cut energy growth by...

AI Reference Designs to Enable Adoption: A Collaboration Between Schneider Electric and NVIDIA

Traditional data center power, cooling, and racks aren’t sufficient for GPU-based servers arranged in high-density AI clusters...

Courtesy of Stream Data Centers
Image courtesy of Stream Data Centers

The Rise of the “Fake” Data Center Developer — And How to Tell the Difference

Stream Data Centers’ Co-Managing Partners expand on the problem of “fake” data center developers and explain how investors and end users can separate the wheat from the chaff....

White Papers

Download the full report.

PCIe® 6.0: Testing for a New Generation

Aug. 1, 2021
This white paper from Anritsu outlines the enhanced PCIe 6.0 technologies, such as PAM4, Forward Error Correction (FEC) and link equalization. It also provides guidelines on selecting...