My N54L is running fine with W 10 pro, has been for a few years now. The only time that it has buggered up is when MS do some type of updates. For some reasons it has been known to reset all permissions of shares to "No" after certain updates. Slowly I'm catching on to that one.
Anyone have any ideas of the maximum disk size that you can use in these..? I have a couple of 6TB reds and 2 5TB in at the moment. Thinking of a 12TB disk, anyone tried anything close to that...?
Thanks
It’s highly unlikely you will need to worry about drive size for decades - they will support anything that’s likely to be released for SATA. Ever.
Win 10 loaded a generic graphics driver not the Matrox one and the iLo driver wasn't installed.
I loaded both of these from my originals from the Win7 build - and now I have a working HP Microserver Gen 8 on Win 10 Version 20H2.
You absolutely are not transcoding 4K video on a 3220. Plex publish CPU Mark metrics for transcoding, it’s roughly 2K of CPU mark for a 1080 H264, your 3220 comes in at 2189, or roughly enough for 1x1080 H264 transcode and you can’t use the iGPU to do HW transcodes as it’s not available to the OS in a micro server.
As to CPU upgrade advice, with that usage requirement, if you just want to transcode a low number of concurrent 1080p H264 streams, then a 1260L v2 has a CPU mark of 3862, depending on the bit-rate, you may get two concurrent streams, exactly what a low end single slot GPU can do and leave your CPU idle.
What I would personally consider is using something more suited to to the task to do the transcoding, a used Dell/Lenovo box based on a 5th/6th gen Intel iGPU combined with PlexPass is pretty much the default option and aren’t much more than your proposed CPU upgrade to a less capable chip. Let the micro server do what it’s good at, being a cheap low powered file server that can run ‘light’ VM’s/services.
anyone know of a way to mount 2.5 inch laptop drives and ssd's into the gen7 microserver drive caddys and have them line up right and go straight in? any adapters or such made for them? the 2.5 to 3/5 adapters iv come across arent correct fit.
yes those do work but getting hold of them is costly. any cheaper alternatives you know of?
The ones that the old WD velociraptor hard drives used (icepak?) should work (I've used one in my Synology)
well after snooping around it turns out hp make an official product that does the job: 654540-001
and its cheaper than the sabrent so im sorted on that now.
Hmm what sort of noise and temps you get with a 15k sas in a velociraptor heatsink?
They do, but they aren’t cheap, the cloned versions sold on numerous online marketplaces that infer they are genuine are cheaper, but genuine ones are usually more expensive.
Noise wise anything 2.5” SAS at 15K is unpleasant, SSD’s are a hell of a lot cheaper to run long term (power), faster and less likely to drive you nuts.
Bigger things spinning round / more platters / bigger motor?Why is 3.5 inch sas 15k so loud compared to 2.5 inch ones?