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SERVICES for IT (Data Centers)

WHAT WE DO

If you had the ability to identify, address, and resolve heat-related issues in your computing environment, how would you do it? Would you want to know how to identify these issues in advance and be proactive rather than reactive?
Go Green Imaging can help!

Go Green Imaging uses a Thermal Imaging Process (also called Infrared Thermography) to identify potentially serious equipment flaws often invisible to the naked eye.

Using a
Go Green Imaging thermal audit identifies equipment anomalies in the early stages of the problem, allowing you to take prompt remedial action before costly system failures occur. Our infrared scans are non-intrusive and don't result in lengthy downtime or lost production to your business.

WHY USE THIS SERVICE?

When you schedule a Go Green Imaging thermal audit, you’ll realize a host of benefits. These include:

  • Cost savings
  • Early detection of potential faults
  • Building hazard reduction
  • No downtime
  • Non-destructive analysis

Additionally, the Go Green Imaging thermal audit can indicate areas where temperature and humidity levels exceed tolerances and might compromise network reliability.

Finally, scheduling a Go Green Imaging thermal audit on a periodic basis enables you to build a detailed condition history of your equipment and tailor a maintenance schedule suited to your business and production schedule.

ADDITIONAL BENEFITS

The benefits of scheduling a Go Green Imaging thermal audit for your IT Data Center don’t stop there. In addition to our standard thermal audit services, your Go Green Imaging certified infrared thermographer will:

  • Inspect perforated tiles to help ensure proper placement
  • Advise on hot aisle/cool aisle placement and a more efficient rack layout
  • Measure room temperature and AC return temperature
  • Inspect and measure chiller plants and other AC parameters
  • Inspect raised floor and ceiling tiles for air leaks that cause AC inefficiency

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Does your data center have hidden agendas?

Thermography Theory

Infrared thermography is the science of acquisition and analysis of thermal data from non-contact thermal imaging devices.

Infrared radiation is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength longer than that of visible light, but shorter than that of radio waves. The name means "below red" (from the Latin infra, "below"), red being the color of visible light of longest wavelength.

Thermography is the observation, measurement and recording of heat. All materials on earth emit heat energy in the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum; the quantity of infrared heat emitted is directly comparative to its temperature. The human eye cannot see in the infrared unaided but by using Thermography and thermal images users can see thermally, observing anomalies that in turn identify problems. Modern infrared cameras view not only in real-time, but can also record infrared images and measure the temperatures of target objects quite accurately—to within 0.1 °C or better. Areas for investigation are displayed as hot or cold in relation to their surroundings.