Thought I'd share the new server

jimbob200521

Diamond Member
Apr 15, 2005
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So my previous server was an i7 965EE with 12gb of DDR3 in an Asrock X58 Supercomputer motherboard. Storage (which will remain unchanged through the upgrade) was handled by 2 HGST 4tb drives in RAID1 for media and 2 WD 500gb in RAID1 for Documents, pictures, setup files, etc. This server was responsible for file sharing between computers and dishing out good ol' media via Plex to the TV's around my house. Not a ton of work for what's an obviously overpowered computer for the task. I've been looking for a way to cut a few dollars off the electric bill and a 130watt TDP CPU that was being liquid cooled seemed an obvious choice.

So, though one of the fine members of another forum, I found what I thought was a good deal on an i3 4130T CPU and Gigabyte motherboard. This would allow me a lower power CPU and the ability to eliminate the liquid cooling and fan required for it in favor of a simple passively cooled tower HSF as well as get rid of the video card the X58 system needed in favor of onboard graphics. The package arrived a couple days ago and last night I finally got a chance to get things swapped over. I've gotta say, this i3 is a lot more zippy around Windows and Plex than I thought it would be. The new computer may have dropped from 12gb to 8gb or RAM but that's still more than enough for my needs at this point. I'm also seeing great temps, even under load and during hours of Windows updates, the CPU has reached a max temp of less than 50°C.

One thing I was thoroughly impressed with was Windows ability to handle the two array's through the transition. The WD 500gb drives were set up in hardware RAID via the onboard SATA on the old server and the 4tb drives were done via software RAID in Windows. I installed the two drives in the new system and Windows actually recognized the two arrays and after a resync, both arrays are up and running. I was expecting hours of data restoration via the external backups I made but this made life so much easier.

Just thought I'd share this here and a few before and after pics for you guys. Hope you enjoy!

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Murloc

Diamond Member
Jun 24, 2008
5,382
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great I'd like something like this for a home server, some people really overdo it but crazy power consumption isn't for me. Is there a particular reason for going passive with the cpu heatsink?
 

jimbob200521

Diamond Member
Apr 15, 2005
4,108
29
91
great I'd like something like this for a home server, some people really overdo it but crazy power consumption isn't for me. Is there a particular reason for going passive with the cpu heatsink?

Mainly because I could but eliminating fans also helps with noise. Then again, how much cooling capacity does a 35watt TDP CPU really need? The old server (must have been that single fan on the liquid cooler) was audible when the TV or something wasn't on but now it's damn near silent in the game room with my two PC's running.

Also, I agree with you about power consumption. The previous build I had was put together using the "I can't believe I'm getting these components for the price I am, might as well use them!". But after having them and realizing the workload on my server is so little, even this i3 is overkill for streaming Plex (no transcoding really necessary, especially within the house) and some file sharing. Glad to have cut the wattage down on the system.
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
10,227
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Looks like one of the SATA port cables is dis-lodged in the bottom-most pic? Check that?

Otherwise, if that's what a 35W TDP CPU looks like passively-cooler; I like.
 

jimbob200521

Diamond Member
Apr 15, 2005
4,108
29
91
Looks like one of the SATA port cables is dis-lodged in the bottom-most pic? Check that?

Otherwise, if that's what a 35W TDP CPU looks like passively-cooler; I like.

Yessir, passively cooled was a big plus for me on this build. As far as the SATA port is concerned, in that pic (until I got Windows up and going) I had left the two 4tb HGST drives unplugged since I wasn't sure about RAID migration in Windows 7, never done it prior to this. Once the system got up and going, I plugged them back in.