Reply 21 of 56, by rein_ein
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Alright,get some stuff for tests and as collection update:
Pci-e x4 FC cards and PRO/1000XT nic.
Some Xeons:
Pair of 3333MP Potomac with 8mb l3
Quadruplet of 3066DP Prestonia with 512kb l2
Pair of 1266 P3-S Tualatins
Pair of ...umm HP Superdome (chipsets or hubs as i thought) not a cpu for sure
And 4x1gb registered ddr1 Samsung branded
Reply 22 of 56, by gdjacobs
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I'm wondering if that chip is the CC ASIC...
All hail the Great Capacitor Brand Finder
Reply 23 of 56, by rein_ein
Reply 24 of 56, by rein_ein
Reply 25 of 56, by brassicGamer
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I like the idea of those thin clients. Are they C3-based or something? Anyway, what's this?
Oh? A big- ass box? Maybe it's a big load of parts. Nope! This is the single biggest piece of computer hardware i have ever purchased (well, privately anyway). Let's see what's inside...
Is a bit of a beast. Longer, wider and (a bit) taller then a standard ATX case. Yes, it's a server: an HP tc3100 to be precise. Let's look inside:
What's that? Integrated SCSI and an empty 370-pin socket? That can only mean one thing. Wait for it...
One bad-ass SCSI controller, with SDRAM for caching and the venerable i960 at the helm. And finally:
Yep, it's a Tualatin. I'm very excited, as it's my first SMP system. I mean really i have no practical use for this thing, as the cost of acquiring drives that would get anywhere near 2TB would be prohibitive. And noisy. And power- hungry. Anyway, I'm looking forward to getting W2K Server running on this and putting in the extra CPU.
Check out my blog and YouTube channel for thoughts, articles, system profiles, and tips.
Reply 26 of 56, by chinny22
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How much did shipping cost on that!?
But welcome to the club! SMP is indeed totally not efficient in any way what so ever, but its just so cool!
Reply 27 of 56, by brassicGamer
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wrote:How much did shipping cost on that!?
But welcome to the club! SMP is indeed totally not efficient in any way what so ever, but its just so cool!
Shipping was free! I don't know how but it was. Probably the only reason i decided to go for it.
Check out my blog and YouTube channel for thoughts, articles, system profiles, and tips.
Reply 28 of 56, by rein_ein
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Reply 29 of 56, by Errius
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I have two tc3100s, and used one as my main file server for years. The motherboard is actually just a rebranded ASUS TR-DLS, so you can put it in any E-ATX sized case with a regular ATX PSU. I ran my server in a case with 8 removable SATA drive bays and a PCI-X RAID card. I also got the remote management card that goes with the model. Very cool machines, but a little too slow for serious work nowadays.
Is this too much voodoo?
Reply 30 of 56, by brassicGamer
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wrote:I have two tc3100s, and used one as my main file server for years. The motherboard is actually just a rebranded ASUS TR-DLS, so you can put it in any E-ATX sized case with a regular ATX PSU. I ran my server in a case with 8 removable SATA drive bays and a PCI-X RAID card. I also got the remote management card that goes with the model. Very cool machines, but a little too slow for serious work nowadays.
It's a little too big for me to use as my main server but, as you say, it's a standard motherboard. This was the first thing I checked when I received it - none of this proprietary IBM or Dell rubbish. I've put the chassis into storage for later, and will rehouse the motherboard. I was considering using it as my full time server (because it supports Server 2003 and is only dishing out files) but how long do you think such a system would last before giving up? It seems to have been decommissioned only recently so has probably served 13-15 years already. I'd rather preserve it than run it into the ground.
Check out my blog and YouTube channel for thoughts, articles, system profiles, and tips.
Reply 31 of 56, by Errius
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Mine was in daily use for four years (2010-2014) and was still going strong when I retired it. It was already well-used when it came to me, though I don't know its past history. I also had a spare so wasn't too concerned if it failed. You may want to preserve yours.
I also ran Windows Server 2003, though a problem I never solved was how to shut it down from within Windows. Selecting "shut down" just causes it to reboot. The only reliable way to remotely shut it down is via the Remote Management card. (The ProLiant that replaced it also has this 'feature' - you have to log into the iLO to shut down.) There's probably a Windows setting somewhere that disables this behavior but I haven't been able to find it. (Debian Linux shuts down without problem so it's clearly an OS issue.)
ETA: I have discovered the cause of this shutdown issue. It is in fact a problem with the Acer USB 2.0/FireWire 400 card I was using in both machines. Remove the card, and the machines shutdown correctly. IDK why Debian was not affected.
Is this too much voodoo?
Reply 32 of 56, by devius
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I think this qualifies although it's not officially called a server, and it has no networking capabilities according to modern standards, but it's a central computer that allows connecting other computers to it with cables in a sort of network, so here goes.
Recently got this System/36 IBM 5364 computer together with other standard 80's PC stuff:
It has 2x 5.25" full-height HDDs of unknown capacity (possibly between 40-65MB each). It also has a RAM board (the long one) and a receiver board that allows a IBM PC to connect to it and serve as console to perform various maintenance tasks. The computer terminals that were used for actual work would connect via the 2 twinaxial connectors on the back. It appears to have been manufactured in the first half of 1987 in Italy.
There's a single 5.25" floppy disk marked Sys36. No other related hardware or software items were included, so I don't think I'll ever be able to interact with it since I lack the required hardware unfortunately.
Reply 33 of 56, by devius
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Did I kill this thread? Or no one has been buying server or networking hardware?
Reply 34 of 56, by Beegle
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wrote:Did I kill this thread? Or no one has been buying server or networking hardware?
You didn't kill it, you nailed it!
Lack of replies is because the topic is more restrictive than "vintage hardware" so less people are implicated.
Give them time. This is a nice topic 😀
The more sound cards, the better.
AdLib documentary : Official Thread
Youtube Channel : The Sound Card Database
Reply 35 of 56, by havli
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Bump! 😈
2x Xeon MP Foster 1.6 GHz - 1MB L3 cache (left)
2x Xeon MP Gallatin 3.0 GHz - 4MB L3 cache (right)
With some luck both should fit my Asus i875P board. 😀
HW museum.cz - my collection of PC hardware
Reply 36 of 56, by Scraphoarder
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IBM Intellistation M (03N2499) dual slot 1 motherboard. I know some dont recomend buying oem boards, but for £31 included shipping i take that risk. Just put it in a frame and put on a wall if i cannot use it 😊
Reply 37 of 56, by rein_ein
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wrote:IBM Intellistation M (03N2499) dual slot 1 motherboard. I know some dont recomend buying oem boards, but for £31 included shipping i take that risk. Just put it in a frame and put on a wall if i cannot use it 😊
Interesting,reminds me ASUS PCH-DL a bit.
Also found photo of my "old" NT system how i mounted non standard mobo in usual ATX case kinda ugly and not a perfect photo but meh
Reply 38 of 56, by Scraphoarder
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wrote:Interesting,reminds me ASUS PCH-DL a bit. […]
wrote:IBM Intellistation M (03N2499) dual slot 1 motherboard. I know some dont recomend buying oem boards, but for £31 included shipping i take that risk. Just put it in a frame and put on a wall if i cannot use it 😊
Interesting,reminds me ASUS PCH-DL a bit.
Also found photo of my "old" NT system how i mounted non standard mobo in usual ATX case kinda ugly and not a perfect photo but meh
Yes those are some big beasts. Your is a true server board without any AGP slot. Later they came with PCI-X and no ISA, so for me they are pretty useless without any option to use a dedicated graphics card excpet for pci. Oh and that lone swan from Matrox 😵
Reply 39 of 56, by Scraphoarder
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£23 inc shipping. Compaq Smart Array 2-E Controller. Will go in my quad P166 Proliant 4500 that has only EISA slots.
Funny print of the little $ Pig on the cache board. Yes i think these controllers costed a fortune 20 years ago 😊