Colocation Services (Colo)
Colocation, also known as rack space, is a cost-effective solution for hosting your servers in a secure, high-performance data centre. By colocating with us, you eliminate the overhead of maintaining your own facility while retaining full ownership and control of your physical infrastructure.
Colocation in the Heart of Cheltenham – Secure, Scalable, and Cost-Effective
At BLYNX AIM, we own and operate a high-performance data centre in Cheltenham, offering easy access from across the UK.
Our colocation solutions are flexible and cost-effective, ranging from single units to quarter, half, and full racks. We also offer fully custom-built private suites for businesses with high-density or specialised infrastructure needs.
With managed service options and bespoke configurations, each colocation plan can be tailored to meet your exact business requirements.
Whether you need a single unit, part or full rack, or a private suite with custom power and bandwidth, we provide the infrastructure, reliability, and support to keep your business running at peak performance.
Custom Colo Options
1U
- Shared cabinet
- Copper and fibre connectivity options
- Copper switch port
- Custom amp options
- Custom CDR options
- Remote hands
- 24/7 support & access
Quarter Rack Colocation
10U
- Shared cabinet
- Copper and fibre connectivity options
- Copper switch port
- Custom amp options
- Custom CDR options
- Remote hands
- 24/7 support & access
Half Rack Colocation
21U
- Shared cabinet
- Copper and fibre connectivity options
- Copper switch port
- Custom amp options
- Custom CDR options
- Remote hands
- 24/7 support & access
Full Rack Colocation
42U
- Private cabinet
- Copper and fibre connectivity options
- Copper switch port
- Custom amp options
- Custom CDR options
- Remote hands
- 24/7 support & access
UPGRADES TO BANDWIDTH AND A&B POWER AVAILABLE (UP TO 64 AMPS PER RACK)
Comprehensive Security for Your Hosted Servers
Our 24/7 CCTV monitoring, manned security, perimeter fencing, and ISMS-certified access control system work together to ensure your servers remain secure at all times.
Resilient & Fully Redundant Data Centre
With a carrier-diverse core network, on-site power generation, and multiple UPS systems, our infrastructure is designed to ensure maximum uptime and reliability, giving you complete peace of mind.
Lower Infrastructure Costs with Colocation
Colocation eliminates the high costs of cooling, ventilation, and risk suppression systems, allowing you to allocate resources more efficiently and invest in other business-critical projects.
Flexible Managed Service Options
Reduce the burden on your resources with our fully managed colocation service. Simply provide the hardware, and we’ll handle everything else—ensuring your infrastructure remains secure, efficient, and always available.
Flexible & Scalable Managed Services
Lighten the load on your IT team with our fully managed colocation service. You provide the hardware, and we take care of the rest—delivering secure, efficient, and high-availability infrastructure with expert support.
What is a data centre?
Data centres may contain rack cabinets, a cage of rack cabinets or a private room or suite.
They provide several core components to keep equipment running, including resilient power, cooling, fire protection and suppression and network connectivity to provide always-on access to hosted servers.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “What is Colocation?”
What is colocation?
In the simplest terms, Colocation is when you place computer hardware which needs to be accessible at all times into a Data centre.
The Colocation service provider will ensure that your equipment is secure, powered up and kept at an optimal temperature. In some cases, they’ll also provide network connectivity to your equipment.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “What is Colocation?”
What are data centre tier ratings?
Not all Colocation providers are created equal and, depending on the facility, some may have a different "tier" rating.
Whilst these tiers aren’t governed by an official body or certification (and very few Data centres have been built to an approved tier-rated design), they’re terms thrown around in the industry which provide a basic understanding of the redundancy and tolerance of the overall facility.
The principle is that Data centre tiers run from tier 1 through to tier 4, with tier 1 being the most basic and tier 4 being the most fault-tolerant and redundant. (Tier 4 also includes armed guards, which only the most high security premises can boast in reality.)
For more on this topic, visit our blog “What is Colocation?”
What is a PUE and why does it matter?
PUE aims to show how efficiently a Data centre is using energy with regard to computer equipment rather than the energy used by the infrastructure that maintains that equipment, such as cooling, ventilation, fire protection and security.
It’s calculated as a ratio of the total amount of energy consumed by the facility and the amount used by computer hardware only.
It matters because monitoring PUE can help Data centres to understand the impact of further measures to improve efficiency, by showing if those measures are having the desired effect and, over time, indicating if any systems or measures are failing.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “Can data centres be environmentally-friendly?”
What is a committed data rate (CDR?)
It’s basically an amount of reserved throughput for your connection.
For example, with a CDR of 10Mbit you can expect to always receive a minimum throughput of 10Mbit on your connection.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “What’s a Committed Data Rate?”
What is a 95th percentile billing?
Your CDR can be billed in a number of ways, one of which is at a 95th percentile.
This is the amount of bandwidth where, for 95% of the time, your usage is below this amount; similarly, for 5% of the time your usage is above this amount. This percentile is calculated over a period of time, such as the 95th percentile over the course of a month.
Bandwidth can be adjusted on demand but must be done in advance of the usage.
38/40 hours of burst up to "line rate" is allowable before it affects the CDR.
When bandwidth is stated as 1/10Gbit, the 1 means committed gigabits and the 10 indicates the burstable capacity. Many providers charge on the burst, unlike BLYNX AIM.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “What’s a Committed Data Rate?”
On the 95th percentile bit, might be worth stating 38/40 hours of burst up to “line rate” is allowable before it affects the CDR. Also maybe worth mentioning the 1/10Gbit means committed Gig and burstable up to 10. Many providers charge on the burst, but not us. Bandwidth can be adjusted on demand but must be done in advance of the usage.
Please explain terms like "resiliency" and "redundancy"
Redundancy is when you have a duplicate set of components running in parallel with the first, providing a dependable backup should your core system fail for any reason.
You might hear terms such as N+1 or 2N. N+1 indicates redundancy; 2N is resilient. 2N+1 is resilient and redundant.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “Resilience and redundancy”, or click here for examples within our data centre
What is a hot aisle?
The idea with a hot aisle is that the hardware producing the heat is arranged so that the hot air is isolated from the cold aisle. The heat output is all directed in the same direction – into the hot aisle – where extractors can take that heat away altogether.
What is a cold aisle?
Separating hot and cold air makes managing the environment much more efficient and cost-effective and contributes to a longer operating life for the hardware located there.
What are remote hands?
Especially when the task in question is as simple as flicking a couple of switches … hardly worth the time, expense and environmental impact of travelling.
For more on this topic, visit our blog “How remote hands are helping hosting customers to keep their distance”.
What cost components come into play with colocation?
The cost of your Colocation service will be made up as the total of:
- Rack space taken (from single units to quarter, half or full cabinets)
Power – costed by Amps required
Bandwidth – costed by speed and capacity required
IPs – costed by the number of IP addresses required
Remote hands support (note, until further notice, BLYNX AIM is providing remote hands and rack and stack free of charge, due to the pandemic
For more information on costs for Colocation, visit our Colocation page.
What rack space sizes do you offer?
Therefore, we offer single units of Colocation in addition to the more traditional quarter racks (10 units), half racks (21 units) and full racks (42 units) measuring 600mm x 1000mm.
Our full racks are provided in a private cabinet for your hardware alone, while our single units and quarter/half racks come in shared cabinets.
For more information on our rack space specifications, visit our Colocation page.
If I have a big project coming up or a spine in demand, can I up my bandwidth requirement for a single month?
What is a managed colocation?
Depending on the level of management, they might take care of your operating system, applications and databases as well as the security and backups.
For more on the benefits of Managed Colocation, visit our blog “Taking Colocation to the next level”.
Why choose colocation over on-premise?
Bandwidth can be a huge cost and it may not be economical to run your own server facility when compared to a Data centre which has multiple redundant links and equipment.
The electricity in a colocation facility is likely 'cleaner' than you’d typically find in an office or home. This 'clean' electricity gives benefits to your equipment, resulting in a longer life.
Locating your infrastructure off-site means you’re able to continue operating in the event of outages or other issues. Employees can still access systems and do their jobs, while customers can still access websites and place orders. Tier 3 and Tier 4 facilities are redundant by design to keep your systems online in the event of a catastrophe, whereas creating and maintaining such an infrastructure at your office would require considerable time, effort and funding.
For more on this topic, visit our blogs “What is Colocation?” and “Colocation vs on-premise”.
Why choose colocation over the cloud?
When you choose Colocation, you own the physical hardware and are, therefore, only limited by the functionality of your own hardware. On the other hand, with cloud services, if you wanted more RAM in a machine it’s highly likely to result in increased monthly costs.
Cloud services are typically pre-configured for the most common use cases, almost a one-size-fits-all approach. Whereas when you colocate with your own hardware, you have complete freedom to configure as per your business requirements, saving both time and money on initial setup costs.
At BLYNX, we're exploring a hybrid cloud concept, where we manage your server estate in different locations - and the networks between them all. It's a best-of-both-worlds solution as you still own the hardware, you know where it is and who has access to it.
For more on this topic, visit our blogs “What is Colocation?” and "Cloud, Colo and Control".
Unmanaged Colocation Services
Maintain full control of your infrastructure by providing and managing your own hardware. Our remote hands service is included for quick fixes, while additional support is available for diagnostics and troubleshooting—contact us for a tailored quote.
Fully Managed Colocation Services
You provide the hardware, and we take care of the rest. Our fully managed service includes maintenance, updates, service monitoring, and ongoing support—ensuring optimal performance while eliminating the burden of managing your server estate.
Ready to Talk?
Whether you need a standard package or a fully bespoke solution, we’re here to help. Get in touch to discuss your requirements with our friendly and knowledgeable team.
We take a creative and customer-focused approach to designing the perfect colocation and managed service solution for your business.
Contact Us Today
Ready to power your infrastructure with secure, high-performance colocation? Get in touch today to discuss your needs—our team is here to help!