this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2023
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Homelab
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Congrats! You just paid for shipping and got the server free.
If anyone will try to tell you it's garbage - don't listen. It's still the cheapest way to get multicore performance with up to 768GB RAM. Downside? It's noisy and power hungry. If you can live with that - you will enjoy it. It's well designed machine that will serve you well.
I had a System X tower (forget what model right off hand) previously. Thing was an absolute beast in terms of size and weight, took two people to manhandle, poor FedEx guy complained about it lol. You think rack mounted servers are loud, my 1U is deathly quiet compared to the jet engines cooling that model of System X. Was always a thrill turning it on though!
I’ve been watching to add another System X to my collection. I love IBM gear where and when I can get it.
Pretty big downside tbh and pretty meh Xeon CPU at this point (equal to a 7th gen i7).
But plus side is the space for HDD, memory is easy to get cheap (DDR3) and a solid case to build in a new build at worse.
Well you can't put two I7s on one board :)
That's why I'm saying - it's a cheap way to get to those levels of performance, not the best way.
In 90% of cases small 920x would be sufficient for homelab, but if someone likes big, loud enterprise machines - this one is oldie but goodie.
Also an i7 of that age doesn't go up to 12 cores, for multithreading that is quite a benefit. Especially in a server.
Technically you can : https://www.newegg.ca/p/pl?d=dual+processor+motherboard
Question is, why would you? 😂 You will get better performance from a Xeon or Epyc cpu for probably less.
The x3650 M4 7915 is a fine server, although outdated to today standards can still pull his weight if hidden and not scared of power cost (like OP mentioned, he's not haha.
I’ve got space to keep this baby out of the way, so the noise problem is a non-issue, and we have residential solar panels installed which significantly mitigates our utility costs, so I’m in a situation where those factors—while still significant—aren’t as big an issue for me atm.
Like I said, nostalgia was an admittedly outsized factor in my decision making process, and I’m fully cognizant of the limitations of this rig, even with significant upgrades, but as a starting point, and with my current planned uses for it, I’m feeling fairly happy with my decision.