Hi All,
As the title says really.
At the moment my home server is a bit of a monster. I inherited six 500Gb IDE drives a couple of years ago through work, as well as a proper 3Ware hardware RAID card (PCI-X). So I trolled a certain online auction site and got hold of a Tyan workstation motherboard and a pair socket 604 dual core Xeons and 4 Gb RAM.
I threw all this into a coolermaster stacker case (the original) with a pair of thermalright 120mm fan based heatsinks and a couple of SATA hard drives mirrored for the OS.
System works brilliantly! Running fedora core 10 linux, does all media hosting and backup duties for the household, hosts a teamspeak server, shares the printer and does all my torrrenting.
Problem is, at a rough guess it probably costs over £300/yr in electricity!
So I'm starting to think about what we can replace it with. I want to keep all the functionality and fault tolerance of our data, but would like it to be considerably more economical to run and maybe generate a little less heat.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
E-I
As the title says really.
At the moment my home server is a bit of a monster. I inherited six 500Gb IDE drives a couple of years ago through work, as well as a proper 3Ware hardware RAID card (PCI-X). So I trolled a certain online auction site and got hold of a Tyan workstation motherboard and a pair socket 604 dual core Xeons and 4 Gb RAM.
I threw all this into a coolermaster stacker case (the original) with a pair of thermalright 120mm fan based heatsinks and a couple of SATA hard drives mirrored for the OS.
System works brilliantly! Running fedora core 10 linux, does all media hosting and backup duties for the household, hosts a teamspeak server, shares the printer and does all my torrrenting.
Problem is, at a rough guess it probably costs over £300/yr in electricity!
So I'm starting to think about what we can replace it with. I want to keep all the functionality and fault tolerance of our data, but would like it to be considerably more economical to run and maybe generate a little less heat.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
E-I