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Volvo to use IBM supercomputer for crash test simulations

The Linux cluster will include more than 150 servers

April 7, 2005 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - Volvo Car Corp., which has been using supercomputers for vehicle crash test simulations for years, has selected IBM to build a powerful new Linux supercomputer for its safety tests.
In an announcement yesterday, IBM said the new machine, which is now in use, is made up of a cluster of more than 150 IBM eServer 325s, each equipped with two Opteron processors from Advanced Micro Devices Inc. The Stockholm-based automaker didn't disclose the cost of the supercomputer.
The IBM cluster supercomputer will replace a Unix-based system from Silicon Graphics Inc., IBM said.
David Turek, vice president of deep computing at IBM, said the new hardware is designed to be used alongside an existing IBM pSeries server cluster that the automaker previously installed. Resources from the two systems, including memory, can be reallocated and used interchangeably as needed to add flexibility for crash simulation projects, he said.
Using supercomputers, automakers can simulate crashes more quickly and less expensively than they can when conducting actual crash tests. The simulations also allow testing of more scenarios of crashes, giving safety engineers more data to work with as they design the vehicles.
A spokesman for Volvo was unavailable for comment today.
Volvo's previous crash test simulation supercomputer was an SGI Origin 3800 server with 128 CPUs, which the automaker purchased in August 2001 from Mountain View, Calif.-based SGI.
Other automakers that use supercomputers for crash simulations include General Motors Corp. (see story) and DaimlerChrysler AG's Chrysler Group (see story).



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