I have the Shuttle K45
...
You can get these cases for dirt cheap on ebay.
Wow, those original motherboards/PSUs must have had a high failure rate.
The LIan Li PC-Q08 is the bomb. Running a 5-drive WHS box with it using that gigabyte dual atom board. It's awesome.
You should look at mini-ITX motherboard and a Chenbro ES34169. It has 4 hot-swap bays, and space for 1 2.5" system drive. It's not exactly what you are looking for, but it gives you space to expand later.
Looks great honestly, but the 120w PSU is that going to be enough to power my stuff?
I'm not running any video but 2 HDs and a decent CPU it seems light, no?
Between a Celeron E3200, Intel DG45FC motherboard, 4GB DDR2, a 40GB SSD, a 250GB 5400RPM HDD, dual GbE NIC, a UVerse modem, a gigabit switch and a wireless n access point, I draw 40-50W at the wall.
Between dual E5520 Xeon quad core, SuperMicro motherboard, 24GB of DDR3, 2x 250GB 7200RPM HDD, 6x 7200RPM 1.5TB HDD, RAID card, gigabit switch and a wireless n access point and a VOIP phone, I draw 210W at the wall.
120W is the internal power draw, not including the inefficiencies of the PSU. I think if you run 2 low-powered HDD and a dual-core system and 4GB of RAM as your dev system, you'd be well within 120W.
Which Intel NAS box? Got a link?dude i thought i was like one of the only people on this forum who had full blown servers @ home.
I use a Sammy as a full duty NAS.
Intel Sossman, which is a dual processor setup on 2 yonahs.
Works very good for a NAS, and i got it fairly cheap.
My main full duty server is 2x X5570's however im swaping them to 2 x L5640's (woot 40W 32nm westmeres!) on a i5520.
My advice.. unless u want to play with full blown servers... there was a intel NAS box which seemed pretty solid and was fairly cheap.
I would look into one of those.. maybe i can get sunny to chip in, as i think he has one.
Which Intel NAS box? Got a link?
actually just got off aim with sunny and he says no...
lol...
says the psu on it is very sensitive to line noise.. and it dies really fast.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ss4200-e-nas-raid,2076.html
That was the unit tho.
dude i thought i was like one of the only people on this forum who had full blown servers @ home.
I use a Sammy as a full duty NAS.
Intel Sossman, which is a dual processor setup on 2 yonahs.
Works very good for a NAS, and i got it fairly cheap.
My main full duty server is 2x X5570's however im swaping them to 2 x L5640's (woot 40W 32nm westmeres!) on a i5520.
My advice.. unless u want to play with full blown servers... there was a intel NAS box which seemed pretty solid and was fairly cheap.
I would look into one of those.. maybe i can get sunny to chip in, as i think he has one.
I like the Chenbro better
I think that's the route I'm going to go... it's really slick looking and it will sit well in a closet I think
Aigo. I think I'm as crazy as you are. Between watercooling, workstations, and my servers, I've got a lot of CPU power at home. I ran out of space in my sig, but in addition to my dual E5520 server (which is my full production server) w/ the 6x 1.5TB disks in RAID 5 (LSI SAS2008 controller) on a SuperMicro X8DTH-6F GPU computer board w/ 24GB of RAM at home, I also have a dual E5504 server with 12GB of RAM on an Asus Z8NA-D6C board w/ a HighPoint RAID 5 with 8 2TB disks as my main storage server running Crashplan. Go big or go home Aigo.
Good choice. Good luck! I recommend getting either the Intel H57 miniITX or Gigabyte H55 miniITX boards with a Core i5-650 and 4 to 8GB of RAM for your server.
I am going to use my Q6600 in that server (which is currently my main machine) and then upgrade my machine instead
This way I am getting a new desktop, and my server will be plenty fast as well.
A Q6600 is a little hot and power hungry. It should be fine, but you might want to pick up a Kill-A-Watt Power Meter from amazon.com or your local fry's and make sure you're not going over 120W. My machines are all on the 45nm manufacturing node, so they use a little less power. So are you looking at the DG45FC for your server then?
Worse comes to worse, I can upgrade the PSU in the Chenbro case, right? What size PSU is it, anyway?
That board looks good... I'm not 100% sure yet though, and I know the Q6600 is a little power hungry but it's also free if I cannibalize my old system, so I think that the cost works out
Worse comes to worse, I can upgrade the PSU in the Chenbro case, right? What size PSU is it, anyway?

 
				
		