The HP Kayaks of this time were marketed as an x86 Wintel alternative to their PA-RISC workstations. The most powerful Windows NT-based, "IBM-compatible" (standard expansion slots, etc) workstations they had to offer. A customer who didn't want UNIX workstations would get steered to the Kayaks. They offered essentially the same Visualize OpenGL accelerators as those PA-RISC systems.
Dwaco wrote on 2024-10-18, 10:59:For those not experienced with hardware designed for the enterprise it sure sounds 'designed to be difficult'. Believe me, it is […]
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shamino wrote on 2024-10-17, 00:05:
Otherwise, it could be some pedantic detail with how the SPD chip is programmed that the HP BIOS doesn't like.
If you haven't already, also test if those IBM modules are working on a normal, sane 440BX system that's not designed to be difficult. 😀
For those not experienced with hardware designed for the enterprise it sure sounds 'designed to be difficult'. Believe me, it is not.
You would just call your reseller, tell them RAM part numbers if you know or your machine part number if you don't
(and they would look up ram p/n in service handbook). You would just purchase HP memory for your specific machine.
And you would do this for years after purchase as long as machine is not EOL.
Then when I bought it, the HP site offered to recycle it. 😀
I agree HP wanted their business customers to buy their parts from HP. Machines like this can have some confusing issues you wouldn't run into on a more mainstream system. IBM, Compaq, and Intel workstations/server boards I've used can be similarly annoying.
In the case of the Kayak I've used, I don't really think it was *intentionally* designed to be difficult, but it wasn't designed to *not* be difficult either. There just wasn't much care or testing put into it's behavior with end-user upgrades. If HP had a part in their inventory that would work, then they considered that good enough. I don't think the machine is intentionally hostile to end-user upgrades, but it didn't get the level of compatibility testing that mainstream PCs get. It was too low volume for it to ever get much attention on it's deficiencies, even with 5 BIOS updates released (on my model anyway).
There was also some frustrating behavior with a 3rd party ATA controller I installed. Fixable, but the solution wasn't entirely satisfactory.
This isn't unique to HP. It's a general comment about "high end" hardware. It likes to be difficult, whether due to intent or due to lack of testing. Therefore these type of systems can be misleading when you test a piece of hardware. If something (a stick of RAM for example) appears not to work in a system like this, test it in something that's designed and tested to be highly compatible and end-user friendly. Until then you don't really know whether to blame the weirdness of the system or the part.
The first time I tried to upgrade the RAM on my Kayak I used Crucial memory that was "guaranteed" for the exact system. 2 modules from them were both incompatible, Crucial didn't know why so I had to return them. They were chipset compatible, the initial memory test passed, but then the BIOS would freeze with an error at the end of the POST process. HP had no documentation of the issue. 1-2 years later the source of the issue became apparent when I got some memory on eBay that did work, and compared with what didn't. I doubt the collective of HP was even conscious of it, it was below their radar or one of their BIOS updates would have addressed it. HP could have saved money by using later-gen modules that were cheaper to build, and by consolidating the SKU with the upgrades they were selling for other systems.
I had a couple other BIOS-related problems also, flaws that wouldn't have shipped on a model that was vetted for consumers.
Despite the quirkiness though, these systems are physically well built and very reliable. It's the only system I've seen that provided a proper support bracket for long/heavy video cards (proprietary mounting point, but not HP's fault there was no standard for this). Every fastener is Torx, which I love. It also has excellent hard drive cooling, and cooling for the expansion card area.
It's the only motherboard I've seen that says Made in France. It also doesn't have a single electrolytic cap on it, it's all tantalums and ceramics. There are electrolytics on the VRMs but those are socketed. The huge number of tantalums worries me a bit, I need to remember to power it up once in a while.
If I ever feel like playing with my Voodoo 3, I'll probably put it in the Kayak because I trust it will be safe in there.
VLIW wrote:Got the 3*256MB ECC registered IBM RAM finally to work after reseating multiple times. The BIOS memory test is super slow however.
Excellent that it got working.
Yeah, I was frustrated with how long it took my system to boot with large amounts of RAM. Unfortunately it seems there's no way to turn the RAM test off (at least on mine there isn't). I suppose somebody at HP thought making it mandatory was a good idea, but I doubt the test is effective.