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I turn my off for vacations or any time I'm out of the house overnight. It was off this week for a few moments, but only because a blown light bulb (Duke...) blew the whole circuit in my Man Cave and shut everything off.
-Rand[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4333/35734799273_0013dbe418_z.jpg[/img]
Killing CLRs since 2004. BOOSH!
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Originally posted by Rand{CLR} View PostI turn my off for vacations or any time I'm out of the house overnight. It was off this week for a few moments, but only because a blown light bulb (Duke...) blew the whole circuit in my Man Cave and shut everything off.
-Rand[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4373/35734799443_53cb20ef13_z.jpg[/img]
Killed by CLRs since 2004. WOOT!
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DB quote
Absolutely untrue! If you talking about a harddrive, it could affect the drives life but not the computer life. If your talking about motherboards, etc, no the increased number of times you power on your equipment will in fact decrease it's life.
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Originally posted by Duke{CLR} View PostWas it one of those CFC light bulbs? I have never seen a regular light bulb blow a circuit.
But I'm in a 22-year old townhouse built in 1987 when poor construction was common. My wiring is functional but we lose lights more often than we should, and my plumbing system is almost 100% that plastic stuff that was banned in the late 80s/early 90s.
-Rand[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4333/35734799273_0013dbe418_z.jpg[/img]
Killing CLRs since 2004. BOOSH!
Support Cainslair. Donate here! [url]http://www.cainslair.org/billspaypal.php?[/url]
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Many of the homes that were built in that time period in my neck of the woods have similar issues. The worst I saw was that the siding of a garage was placed on the solid insulation which was stabled to the studs. There was no plywood or particle board used. There is nothing worse then a lame developer.[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4373/35734799443_53cb20ef13_z.jpg[/img]
Killed by CLRs since 2004. WOOT!
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I remember when they switched from copper wirong, in homes, to aluminum.
Apache
Where do you put the Bayonet?
Chesty Puller (upon seeing a flamethrower for the first time)
I am all in favor of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Lets start with typewriters.
Frank Lloyd Wright
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Yep a lot of houses have burned down because of aluminum wiring. When I lived in Texas there were a lot of house fires attributed to aluminum wiring.
Apache
Where do you put the Bayonet?
Chesty Puller (upon seeing a flamethrower for the first time)
I am all in favor of keeping dangerous weapons out of the hands of fools. Lets start with typewriters.
Frank Lloyd Wright
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Originally posted by mapes View PostDB quote
Yes this is technically true however in reality it is a negligible effect.
I'm not stating this to blow my horn or start any "my experience is broader than yours" type discussions. I just wanted to give a little on my background.
NOTE: DO NOT confuse rebooting with powering cycling(powering off and back on). There are a different sequence of events that takes place resulting in reboots being less damaging than power cycles.
I can safely say if I took two identically populated server rooms with a variety of equipment and in one I run it 24/7 and the other I consistently power cycle it at least a minimum of twice per day, you would be astounded on the failure trends that would develop in each room of hardware.
The 24/7 run server room would have break downs of PSUs, harddrives and fans, etc. (largely moving parts related components)
The consistently power cycled server room would have a significantly increased failure rate of motherboards, video cards, backplanes, etc. (largely solid state related components).[IMG]http://thepebkac.net/images/sigs/Outdoors_sig.jpg[/IMG]
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Interesting point however when talking about a home system and not a data center rack mount system I still say the effect is negligible over the expected life of a computer system. Rack mount pizza boxes have a higher failure rate over all from decreased air flow in my experience. Also the temp delta is huge between a fully cooled data center and a home office environment. One other point needs to made and that is manufacturers test they're products by power cycling them and running them continuously. These products have an expected lifetime MTBF. MTBF takes into account power cycling.
Some interesting reading I stumbled upon recently actually suggests that leaving the a system powered on is worse for solid state components. This is due to the effect known as Electromigration. It is especially interesting to note that over-clocking a processor and the ram bus will hasten this failure and that it is unavoidable over time. So to me thats kinda of an interesting dichotomy. It's ok to over-clock the proc/ram/mb for the trade off of power vs failure. However it's not ok to power off a system for the trade off of saving power vs failure.
Interestingly enough Intel's SpeedStep or AMD's PowerNow! which slows down the proc when not in use will actually increase the life time of the device.
Originally posted by DougBob View PostFrom my experience, which is not trivial, I've noticed it can cause anywhere from 10 to 30% degradation in solid state components. I've been working on and maintaining teletype, messaging, computer, crypto, networking and electronic devices since 1986 and I base my observations on that experience.
I'm not stating this to blow my horn or start any "my experience is broader than yours" type discussions. I just wanted to give a little on my background.
NOTE: DO NOT confuse rebooting with powering cycling(powering off and back on). There are a different sequence of events that takes place resulting in reboots being less damaging than power cycles.
I can safely say if I took two identically populated server rooms with a variety of equipment and in one I run it 24/7 and the other I consistently power cycle it at least a minimum of twice per day, you would be astounded on the failure trends that would develop in each room of hardware.
The 24/7 run server room would have break downs of PSUs, harddrives and fans, etc. (largely moving parts related components)
The consistently power cycled server room would have a significantly increased failure rate of motherboards, video cards, backplanes, etc. (largely solid state related components).
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That's wild, I didn't realize they had started calling this something else also. It use to be call electron erosion.
I guess they wanted to fancy up this vocab also
Originally posted by mapes View PostInteresting point however when talking about a home system and not a data center rack mount system I still say the effect is negligible over the expected life of a computer system. Rack mount pizza boxes have a higher failure rate over all from decreased air flow in my experience. Also the temp delta is huge between a fully cooled data center and a home office environment. One other point needs to made and that is manufacturers test they're products by power cycling them and running them continuously. These products have an expected lifetime MTBF. MTBF takes into account power cycling.
Some interesting reading I stumbled upon recently actually suggests that leaving the a system powered on is worse for solid state components. This is due to the effect known as Electromigration. It is especially interesting to note that over-clocking a processor and the ram bus will hasten this failure and that it is unavoidable over time. So to me thats kinda of an interesting dichotomy. It's ok to over-clock the proc/ram/mb for the trade off of power vs failure. However it's not ok to power off a system for the trade off of saving power vs failure.
Interestingly enough Intel's SpeedStep or AMD's PowerNow! which slows down the proc when not in use will actually increase the life time of the device.[IMG]http://thepebkac.net/images/sigs/Outdoors_sig.jpg[/IMG]
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by Pidgeot_GirlWell, I finally made my back to the lair! I hope fortune has blessed everyone this new year! I've got some updates, dad (Todd98 )is over 60....yall send...1 Feb 2025, 05:42 PM
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