• 0 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 9 months ago
cake
Cake day: October 17th, 2023

help-circle


  • Does it do anything? The x10sdv can be a pita to troubleshoot as there is nothing at all to diagnose without access to ipmi.

    I’ve had multiple x10sdv, some had a corrupted bios, others were completely shorted, and they all had the exact same symptoms of powering on, but only spinning fans at Max and nothing else.

    You can get a diagnostics card to read out the post codes, but it’s hard to find and often not cheap if you can find it at all. Should be the AOC-LPC80-20 iirc, if you want to look for it. If you get anything at all that’s not just 00, there’s hope a bios rewrite can fix it.


  • I’d probably not go with a T-Version, as those are capped to a specific TDP. So if you need more compute power, it’ll limit you fast earlier than a non-T CPU. Idle draw is basically the same, and usually the state of my hosts is idle or full throttle.

    Also T-Variants tend to be more expensive.

    Storage is a thing to consider as well. At best those machines offer a single NVMe and SATA, a lot even only one or the other.

    Servethehome does have a nice series about those mini PCs, so best to take a look there which one to pick for your needs.


  • hannsr@alien.topBtoHomelab@selfhosted.forumNetwork upgrade!
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    I remember my first own switch being a Netgear as well. It was a regular 100mbit switch, but it had the words “ProSafe” on it and was made of metal, so that felt really good… Basically it looked exactly like in your picture.

    I think that was also the only piece of Netgear equipment I ever really used 😅. Did they ever change the design?





  • In short: no. In longer: hell no.

    Jokes aside, everything that comes with a Xeon L is ancient and will draw a lot of power for not very much performance. In fact, I think your i3 might be more powerful than those R610.

    Those R620 may still be ok, but they are also getting really old now. They will be very noisy - if you haven’t run a server like those at home, you’ll be surprised how loud those are. Imagine a vacuum running constantly in your room. That noisy. You can’t do much about that, they simply need a ton of airflow, so more quiet fans would most likely lead to overheating.

    For your use case I would simply go with a used desktop (not the tiny ones, a regular sized one), add a HBA for more drives and call it a day. Those are cheap, roughly 70-80€ for a used 7th gen i5. The bigger ones might even be cheaper because most people want the sff or tiny versions. A used LSI HBA with IT mode may be another 30-40€ or so. That system will sip power and most likely won’t be audible. If it is, swap in silent fans and done.

    If you do want a rack mount, ipmi, and so on, I’d go the diy route with a Xeon e3 v5/6. Gen system. Those are plenty powerful and don’t draw too much power. Downside is they mostly exclusively use ECC UDIMM which is rather rare and expensive in the used market.