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Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

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  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by momaka View Post
    170-225 MB/s .... not too shabby at all.
    For hardware this old, I was actually pretty impressed with it!!

    Originally posted by momaka View Post
    This message brought to you by an old P3 Dell Latitude laptop with a 20 GB IDE HDD with a transfer rate of... like less than 10 MB/s tops
    Nice!! This place has becoming like the "Land of Misfit Hardware".....

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    Just a little update.....CrystalDiskMark of pair of 300gb 15k's in a raid0 on the same controller (Adaptec 2120S)
    170-225 MB/s .... not too shabby at all.

    This message brought to you by an old P3 Dell Latitude laptop with a 20 GB IDE HDD with a transfer rate of... like less than 10 MB/s tops

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Stefan Payne View Post
    so a modern PCIe NVMe SSD has higher transferrates than the main memory of that system?
    You do realize that it's 15yrs old, right?

    Leave a comment:


  • Stefan Payne
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    so a modern PCIe NVMe SSD has higher transferrates than the main memory of that system?

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post

    System 3:
    Supermicro X6DA8
    2x single-core 3.8GHz Irwindale CPU's
    16gb ECC DDR2
    Quadro FX4800
    Adaptec 2120S U320 SCSI
    Single 3.5" 15k RPM cheetah in JBoD

    Novabench: I guess that 200MHz made no difference, CPU score is the same as System 1.


    CrystalDiskMark: I will rerun this when I pick up a couple more drives to test some RAID configs.
    Just a little update.....CrystalDiskMark of pair of 300gb 15k's in a raid0 on the same controller (Adaptec 2120S):

    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    Just a little footnote for this thread for Momaka and his love of older PSU's...
    Hehe, thanks!

    Actually, if there is anyone that would enjoy this more than me, it is Mr. Pentium4, as he is the one that gave me my e-Power PSU (same PSU as this one). He said he had several of these PSU (recapped, of course) running in various systems, and they've been very reliable - each PC netting over 20 or 30k hours, IIRC.

    So good thing you saved it. There PSU are kind of like the old CWT-built Antecs: good workhorses only downed by bad caps (thanks to Fuhjyyu! ). Unlike the CWT Antecs, these PSUs use a PWM chip for the 5VSB circuit rather than your typical primitive 2-transistor design of the CWTs.

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    This one is an Enlight EN-470MP that was in the Enlight case from earlier in the thread.
    It's still a Topower unit, though, as evident by those "TOP" markings on each transformer. Unlike Zumax (which is what e-Power began to use after Topower), Topower-built units are pretty well designed and reliable.

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    Disassembly was a pain with this PSU...had to desolder a full heatsinks worth of transistors to gain access to the caps under the heatsink.
    Yeah, that's the only downfall of PSUs with big heatsinks: you either have to remove them or work under the heatsinks. I recapped two very beefy FSP units for someone here, and they both took quite a bit of time to do due to the large heatsinks. One of them, I actually had to work the caps out without removing the heatsinks, as the PCB was dual-layer and very hard to heat up.

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    Lol, one of those units you have to work on with white gloves.

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    Reassembled and testing on an old lab rat board.....all was well.
    https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1527227316
    Ha! Isn't that the old P4 AOpen mobo you posted in this thread?
    I knew you'd find a use for it.

    Originally posted by Per Hansson
    That's quite the dedication to recapping a PSU.
    Yup. But it's one of those units you probably won't have to touch again for at least another 10 years, if not more.

    Leave a comment:


  • Per Hansson
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    That's quite the dedication to recapping a PSU.
    I guess there are some drawbacks to beefy heatsinks
    Looks quite allot nicer without all the dust bunnies too!

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Just a little footnote for this thread for Momaka and his love of older PSU's... This one is an Enlight EN-470MP that was in the Enlight case from earlier in the thread. While I didn't use this PSU in this build, I did repair it for something else later on, which is to be determined....

    Of course some pics....some bad fukyou caps...


    Disassembly was a pain with this PSU...had to desolder a full heatsinks worth of transistors to gain access to the caps under the heatsink.





    The shell...


    recapped.



    Going back together...


    It's shiny!!


    Reassembled and testing on an old lab rat board.....all was well.


    that's all for now.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Stefan Payne View Post
    Time for vBulletin upgrade?
    Newer versions save whatever you were typing...
    Just for that feature? - Nah, not worth it, IMO. And even if it wasn't just for that feature, I still don't think it's necessary to upgrade.

    If anything, I really like that fact that the forum almost hasn't changed in terms of looks and functionality in the last 10 years (wait, I've been here for 10 years?? ........ yup, just checked: join date was 4th of May in 2008. WOW! ). But what I like even more is that it isn't bloated with pointless features, unlike many newer/updated forums today. You can browse on a Pentium II or a Ryzen Threadripper, and it would still be blazing fast on both.

    So I am with TC on this one.

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    ^

    NEVER!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Stefan Payne
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    ^
    I never saw it....you must have forgot to hit submit!
    Time for vBulletin upgrade?
    Newer versions save whatever you were typing...

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Originally posted by Topcat
    ^
    I never saw it....you must have forgot to hit submit!
    Never happened before, but given the goof I am... it's possible

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    What better use for an old beige Aopen case...
    https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1525543396
    Couldn't agree more.

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    Old mATX P4 system (momaka, let me know if you want it, it works).
    https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1525543396
    Oh, cool, an AOpen motherboard!
    With AOpen out of the motherboard business, it's pretty tempting to add to the collection. However, I think I should pass it up, mainly because I already have too many older motherboards sitting around and collecting dust. So it would be a shame to do that to it. I really do appreciate your offer, though! I guess if I come up with a plan to find a use for it, I'll let you know.

    Don't forget to debu.... oh, nevermind we talked about this before

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    I discovered that I am completely out of 80mm case fans, atleast ones that aren't complete crap....
    Not sure what you're calling complete crap, but even most cheapo sleeve bearing fans from rock-bottom low-end PSUs and cases will last a long time one opened and their sleeve bearings cleaned+lubed properly.

    The fans I call complete crap are the "long life bearing" ones - i.e. modern day sealed sleeve bearing fans that cannot be taken apart and fixed when they go bad. And yes, they do go bad fairly quickly - sometimes even quicker than the cheapo fans mentioned above.

    Originally posted by Topcat View Post


    Originally posted by Topcat View Post
    I need to track down a couple more 9800GT's (they're cheap enough), for the 'netburst showdown'....so most things are on the same playing field.
    The 9800 GT's are great cards and quite abundant on the used market now. However, they tend to run a bit hot and also fail fairly often under heavy stress after a few years due to inadequate cooling - at least the ones with single-slot coolers.

    For this reason, I prefer the Radeon HD3870 cards (and often grab them when I see one offered for under $15 shipped on eBay). While they don't perform as good in games as the 9800 GT, I think they do have more raw computing power (336 GFLOPs for the 9800 GT vs. nearly 500 GFLOPs for the HD3870), so they may score higher in F@H, mining, and other similar apps. The HD3870 also usually costs about the same and has the same power consumption. It's just a bit more rare. What I really like about the reference HD3870 is that it comes with a dual-slot cooler and can run really cool, once the BIOS settings are tweaked a bit (the stock BIOS fan curve tends to idle the fan too low, making these cards cook under load - a 5-minute fix with Radeon BIOS Editor).

    And if you need more GPU power for the same money, the HD4850 will whoop both the HD3870 and the 9800 GT's butts (around 1 TFLOPs worth of computing power). That said, the reference HD4850 does have one thing I don't like: single-slot cooler that runs way too hot. It can be tamed with BIOS editing, but then the card becomes loud IMO. So unless you find a dual-slot cooler HD4850 with bigger fan(s), I can't say I recommend them over the 9800 GT, unless performance is really what you are going for.

    Originally posted by Topcat
    Novabench: I guess that 200MHz made no difference, CPU score is the same as System 1.
    On Netburst architecture, 200 MHz difference is pretty much nothing. Only once you go past 400-600 MHz, you start to see some. HT on the other hand, helps quite a bit more than an increase in the core speed, as you saw from your benchmarks

    Originally posted by ratdude747 View Post
    ^I have the PNY "energy efficient" version in my irwindale box... slighly less performance (underclocked a tad), but uses a slimmer heatsink and is under 75W (no PCIe power connector, which is good since that PSU doesn't have it).
    Those are really nice cards. Essentially, you get almost the full performance of a G92 GPU, but at a much more reduced power draw. Just beware that some of them use cheaper heatsinks with crappy fans that tend to fail quicker than on the standard 9800GT's.
    Last edited by momaka; 05-17-2018, 12:33 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    ^
    I never saw it....you must have forgot to hit submit!

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Hmmm. What happened to the long post I typed and posted here a few days ago?
    I guess the system ate it. Oh well, I'll retype it.

    Leave a comment:


  • 370forlife
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Ahh the X6DAL board. I had an X6DAL-G when I was in highschool as my main computer. I'm not sure what happened to that machine. I think it fell victim to my Dad's murderous computer recycling after I moved out. Sorry, that just made me really nostalgic.
    Last edited by 370forlife; 05-15-2018, 07:46 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    The showdown:

    System 1:
    Supermicro X6DAL-XG
    2x single-core 3.6GHz Irwindale CPU's
    12gb ECC DDR1
    GeForce 9800GT
    3ware 9550 w/BBU
    2x 2.5" 10k RPM velociraptors in a RAID-0


    Novabench: CPU score of 277


    CrystalDiskMark:




    System 2:
    Supermicro X6DAI-G2
    2x dual-core 2.8GHz Paxville CPU's
    16gb ECC DDR2 memory
    Nvidia Quadro NVS 450
    Adaptec 2405 SAS controller
    2x 3.5" 15k RPM Cheetah SAS in a RAID-0

    Novabench: CPU score of 331


    CrystalDiskMark: I think I need to check controller settings, the write speeds should be much higher.


    System 3:
    Supermicro X6DA8
    2x single-core 3.8GHz Irwindale CPU's
    16gb ECC DDR2
    Quadro FX4800
    Adaptec 2120S U320 SCSI
    Single 3.5" 15k RPM cheetah in JBoD

    Novabench: I guess that 200MHz made no difference, CPU score is the same as System 1.


    CrystalDiskMark: I will rerun this when I pick up a couple more drives to test some RAID configs.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    The X6DAL sleeper is complete. I did a quick Novabench of this system, the others will soon follow.

    Fans installed.




    Buttoned up & installing the necessary stuff.




    Novabench 3.04 results:


    CPU score of a pair of single core 3.6GHz Irwindales is 277. I'll run the 3.8's and the pair of dual core 2.8GHz Paxvilles.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Reran CrystalDiskMark this morning since the battery is tested & charged....write caching is re-enabled.... Results are much better.

    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Going together.


    I discovered that I am completely out of 80mm case fans, atleast ones that aren't complete crap....so I did order some to fill the 2x openings next to the IO shield.

    A little config change.
    2x 160gb Velociraptors in a raid0 on a LSI 9550 w/BBU & batt.





    Used the last of the free "powerman" PSU's I got a while back.



    Gotta love beige....


    Not bad.


    Winders 7...


    CrystalDiskMark on the velociraptor raid0. The numbers were lower than expected, but I then realized this controller hadn't been powered up in a while and the battery was going through its test & charge process....which turns off write caching. I'll retest it when it finishes its song & dance.



    This post made from it of course....I'll wrap it up when the fans arrive. I need to track down a couple more 9800GT's (they're cheap enough), for the 'netburst showdown'....so most things are on the same playing field.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • Topcat
    replied
    Re: Paxville or Bust! The Supermicro X6DA8 Project

    Testing before assembly....and its a good thing I did. GPU interferes with the FET heatsink....





    Trimmed. I had a slip with the angle grinder and took off a little more than intended....but it seems to be of no harm. After some load testing afterward, the FET's aren't overly hot. The GPU fan seems to pull air over the shaved sink.







    Up & running.... Next step is to put it together.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:

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