Cheap and Powerful Home Virtual Server - $300 GETS YOU A TON OF POWER!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 19 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 492

  • @WDCallahan
    @WDCallahan 4 роки тому +650

    And it only costs $300! If you don't count the $4000 of hardware we already had lying around...

    • @shadowmasterlord
      @shadowmasterlord 4 роки тому +37

      and then you open ebay and for 300 is only mb with cpus or for 400 with one weaker cpu :D

    • @TwoWarPlayers
      @TwoWarPlayers 4 роки тому +26

      I dont know the electricity cost in the US but in Germany it would cost me a asset.
      ~ 35 Cent per kWh
      Edit: So the Internet says 13.19 Cents in the US.

    • @erroronetwofour1261
      @erroronetwofour1261 4 роки тому

      @@shadowmasterlord presne tak ako hovoríš 😂

    • @ashtreylil1
      @ashtreylil1 4 роки тому +80

      Dell Precision T7600 16-Core 2x Intel E5-2680 with 64 GB ram - $400 + $55 shipping
      DELL PRECISION T7600 1300W POWER SUPPLY - $50 + $16 shipping
      AC Power Supply Cord Cable 4 Dell Precision - $8 + $3 shipping
      XPG LITE SX6000 Series: 512GB Internal PCIe Gen3x4 (NVMe) - $66
      M.2 NVMe SSD to PCIe X4 Adapter - $20
      Samsung 860 EVO 500GB 2.5 SATA III - 8 x $85 ($680)
      Athena Power BP-15827SAC an 1 x 5.25" External Drive Bay to 8 x 2.5" - $65
      Cable Matters Internal Mini SAS to SATA Cable - $12
      Seagate ST5000DM000 5TB Internal 5900RPM 3.5" HDD Lot of 4 - $275 + $9 shipping
      Total - $1660..... So 1360 dollars over or 5.5x the ammount presented in this $300 server. The extra 5tb drive can be used for backup of the SSDs and NVMe capacity (4tb with raid 5) while the other three can be in raid 5 (10tb). This only gives you space for one complete backup of of the fast storage and with the other 3 5tb drives in raid 5 you have resiliency but no backups. Total capacity would be about 14tb in this config.
      This is without a $1,000 1080ti if you want to do rendering.
      Just the extra hardware is $1,120 aside from the server, assuming you find one with 64gb of ram and 2 xenons
      64GB (4 x 16GB) DDR3 PC3-8500R - $86
      Intel Xeon E5-2680 2.7GHz 20MB 8-Core 2 x 52 ($104)
      If you include the NAS shown in video and asssuming you want 5x capacity (70tb) for backups it adds an extra $3,660
      Synology 12 bay NAS DiskStation DS2419+ - $1500
      Seagate IronWolf 6TB NAS Internal Hard Drive - 12 x 180 ($2,160)
      Bringing total cost to $5,320 with the parts used. Without power consumption.
      I understand that this isn't a build video and it's essentially just saying look what I built for the channel but this could have easily been titled "building the "bigboi" virtual server" without the mention of cheap or modest or anything that implies that this is affordable. Yes you can get a ton of power out of a sub $500 server and that is freaking amazing but without storage that power is applied to nothing.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +12

      On the west coast of the US where we are it's $.11/kWh

  • @metallicapirate
    @metallicapirate 4 роки тому +162

    I think everyone else is echoing the same feelings: This video is misleading. It definitely cost more than $300 to build this computer, they're just not including the cost of the parts they "already had lying around".

    • @GRBtutorials
      @GRBtutorials 4 роки тому +2

      How is it misleading if $300 gets you a dual Sandy Bridge Xeon machine with 16 GB (upgradeable to 512 GB!) of RAM and a 500 GB HDD? That's what I call a good deal, and plenty for most people.

    • @metallicapirate
      @metallicapirate 4 роки тому +5

      @@GRBtutorials because you're not factoring in that people probably don't already have that chip, that RAM, etc. You used a lot of parts and supplies that didn't come with the $300 purchase from eBay...

    • @GRBtutorials
      @GRBtutorials 4 роки тому

      Jeremy Graslie No, they said it was all included in the price. They upgraded the RAM to 64 GB because of their requirements, but 16 GB were included (2:15), and the Xeons were included as well.

    • @oliverrogers6009
      @oliverrogers6009 4 роки тому +2

      Configured 2x 2Tb hdd, 64gb ram and 3gb gpu for $355

    • @todddelozier8172
      @todddelozier8172 3 роки тому

      I just looked for this exact build. Im seeing a ton of bare bones builds.

  • @georgeandrews2839
    @georgeandrews2839 4 роки тому +44

    Here I was proud of my budget build... $152 for a quad core I5 3.1 ghz Lenovo tower with 16 gb of ram and 500gb hard drive and windows 10.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +14

      Still be proud! If it serves its purpose for your needs then that’s great!

  • @Harrisboyuno
    @Harrisboyuno 2 роки тому

    Can't tell you how helpful this video was. I had a come up on a T7610 from work. Our PACS department was tossing one of these pc's. Came with quad DP card and SAS card with 3x2TB SAS drives. Added another 10c Xeon and 128GB of RAM. Now I am able to run 10 - 15 VM's with no issue.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому

      Awesome! Glad you found the video and that it helped! Consider subscribing!

  • @Smart-Skippy
    @Smart-Skippy 4 роки тому +30

    I'm new. Haven't seen you before. I like your fast moving pace and have subscribed, Thanks a million . Kudos and muchas gracias !

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for subscribing!

    • @brockwilkie9990
      @brockwilkie9990 4 роки тому

      same situation here! looking forward to seeing everything else you guys have!

    • @lutherhill2405
      @lutherhill2405 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek I want to build this out for a Data Science personal work station. What kind of Nvidia graphics cards can I put on this? Preferably two of them, with each one having 12gb ram

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      @@lutherhill2405 there are a ton of 16x PCIe slots in this chassis, so you could easily throw two RTX Titans into this box and power them without an issue. The PSU is rated at 1300W so even with two giant cards consuming wattage, you'll have a lot of power budget left over!

    • @lutherhill2405
      @lutherhill2405 4 роки тому

      2GuysTek excellent thanks. I will definitely be building this out over the next year.

  • @GutnarmEVE
    @GutnarmEVE 4 роки тому +9

    high-end workstations make for perfect SOHO servers: great performance and reliability, (usually) easily serviceable, and spare parts readily available. and: you don't need hearing protection if it lives in a closet next to your desk.
    if uptime and redundancy isn't your main concern, you can squeeze a lot of performance out of them for quite little money.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Couldn’t have said it better!

    • @GutnarmEVE
      @GutnarmEVE 4 роки тому

      @@IJoeAceJRI ofcourse you can; the hardware surrounding it (in that weight class, mind you) will just go "thanks for all the fish" in a few months - while running, and you depending on it

    • @GutnarmEVE
      @GutnarmEVE 4 роки тому

      @@IJoeAceJRI generally, it's not the CPU that burns down, but a power supply, a disk controller fails, stuff like that. neither is a problem if you have hardware redundancy
      (edit #3, sorry.)
      of course you could run a server with a 1600 on a decent mobo and you'd be fine. but you couldn't run it with a terabyte of error-correcting RAM and at 100% load, 24/7, for years.
      "home NAS" vs "business machine, needs to make money"

  • @cheesefries7436
    @cheesefries7436 4 роки тому +19

    That little SSD caddy is so cool

  • @jroc151
    @jroc151 4 роки тому +4

    I lucked out and was given 5 Dell T3600s. Went out found some server RAM on ebay and got these puppies running in a vSAN cluster at home.😎

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      That’s great! We originally were thinking about using T3600s!

  • @GregariousDudeGaming
    @GregariousDudeGaming 11 місяців тому

    Amazing video! You guys are the best! Cannot stop recommending you guys enough! Keep up the awesome work and content!

  • @bertnijhof5413
    @bertnijhof5413 2 роки тому +1

    I like your hardware and as a Dutchman I love the reuse of existing hardware. I use Ubuntu 21.10, OpenZFS 2.0 and Virtualbox 6.1 to store my virtual machines. My hardware ($349) is modest a Ryzen 3 2200G; 16GB (3000MHz); 512GB SP nvme-SSD (3400/2300MB/s) and from the previous PC a 128GB SP sata-SSD and 2 HDDs 500GB Seagate and 1TB WD Black. I can run 2 modern Windows VMs or 4 Linux VMs at the same time.
    I also have 3 tier storage in 3 datapools for my VMs:
    - The 14 most frequently used VMs use the high performance storage with a 2 level storage hierarchy; the L1ARC 4GB memory cache and the nvme-SSD.
    - The 27 VMs, still receiving updates, are on a 3 level storage hierarchy; the same 4GB L1ARC; 90GB L2ARC (read cache) + 5GB ZIL (sync write cache) on sata-SSD and 2 x 500GB HDD partitions in Raid-0. Here I also store my personal data in a separate dataset, but with copies=2, so all my data is stored on both HDDs, a kind of Raid-1 subset inside Raid-0.
    - The 29 VMs, that are not receiving updates anymore, are also on a 3 level storage hierarchy; the same 4GB L1ARC; 30GB L2ARC + 3GB ZIL on the same sata-SSD and a 500GB partition at the end of the 1TB HDD.
    Note that all storage and all caches are lz4 compressed and the compression ratio is ~2.0.
    My VMs are a mix of distro-hopping and collecting OSes. As collector I have all Windows releases from 1.04 to 11 and the Ubuntu releases 4.10, 5.04; all LTS releases and the development edition for 22.04. As distro-hopper I have Garuda-Linux; Manjaro; Fedora; OpenSUSE; Linux Mint; Xubuntu; etc etc.
    I have an very cheap backup-server built of leftover parts and I added a new power-supply ($18):
    - a Pentium 4 HT (1C2T; 3.0GHz); 2GB DDR (400MHz) and 4 HDDs in total 1.21TB (2 x 3.5" IDE 250+320GB and 2 x 2.5" SATA-1 320+320GB) running 32-bits FreeBSD 13.0 on OpenZFS :)

  • @denny-lp1qb
    @denny-lp1qb 4 роки тому +1

    And here I am, with my Desktop PC with 16Gigs, a FX8350 and a GTX960(4Gb). VMWare workstation with 9 VMs always running. I wish I could have that much RAM :(

  • @chempranav
    @chempranav 3 роки тому +2

    Loved your 8x 2.5" bay hack. what's the name of the product? Does it fit to replace CD ROM drive?

  • @RNMSC
    @RNMSC 4 роки тому +1

    I added a pair of virtual machine servers. Pretty much identical. Since they are expected to do the major lifting here, I named them Hans and Franz.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Love it! They will *CLAP* pump you up!

  • @pyrielrising4338
    @pyrielrising4338 4 роки тому

    This is smart....so many tech channels advocate building servers with new parts when there is so much that can be had on secondary markets. Server parts that once cost thousands of dollars can be picked up for a few hundred today. It makes absolutely no sense to run out and buy brand new when gear that has worked for the last decade can be had for pennies on the dollar. Well done.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks for the comment and watching! We think the same thing!

  • @TYX8926
    @TYX8926 4 роки тому +3

    Great job on this build. Why is this channel underrated? It should be famous!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      Thanks for watching!

    • @TYX8926
      @TYX8926 4 роки тому +1

      @@2GuysTek You're welcome. :)
      Hope you'll get more fans coming in.

  • @patrickregis1
    @patrickregis1 4 роки тому +15

    300$,, a short googling on various refurb, second hand site will tell the truth...

  • @tjlambaes
    @tjlambaes 4 роки тому

    I did something like this a few months ago. I did not upgrade mine like you guys did. I have so many ideas now.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      Awesome! Good luck!

  • @thorium9190
    @thorium9190 2 роки тому

    Got an Awesome deal on a Dual Xeon E5-2650 V2 Dell Precision T5610. For total of 16 cores and 32 threads for 70 bucks! The issue was the motherboard sata controller. Easily fixed with using a pcie sata card.

  • @JGcd001
    @JGcd001 4 роки тому +5

    Great quality video, I'd be curious to see it in action with a small tour of your VM's. I've never seen a host running more than 4 at a time, so this would be some quality entertainment! ;)

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +2

      This is a great idea! Let’s see what we can do in the future! Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @drkcodeman
    @drkcodeman 4 роки тому

    I have a Dell R710, I got for around $200 I upgraded the shitty raid controller to a H200 to support sata 3 speeds and upgraded the power supply for $20 and modded the power supply to a 6 pin and upgraded the riser card to a single x16 and got a quadro card for like $35, using MSI Afterburner to overclock the card and it works like a charm for the cheap :)

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      Those sound like interesting mods! Was it a standard ATX PSU? If so, how'd you get it to fit?

    • @drkcodeman
      @drkcodeman 4 роки тому

      I actually used a server power supply they are way cheaper then desktop, main reason why i am using a server parts are so cheap. Here is the power supply mod i was talking about
      i.imgur.com/Dp7MHJO.jpg
      i.imgur.com/vqNmHx1.jpg
      Not the greatest solder job but it works. I have a Nvidia Quadro 4000 in it. Currently it does DHCP for the house and running a steam in home streaming server. My next big upgrade is going to be a PCIE extender cable so I can fit a full size gtx 1080 in it.
      Here is a screenshot of the servers resouces:
      i.imgur.com/pSEUbRU.png

  • @jimbendtsen8841
    @jimbendtsen8841 4 роки тому +1

    I did that with a T5610. 128GB ram. You can boot off NVME if you use Clover on a USB.

  • @callmebigpapa
    @callmebigpapa 3 роки тому

    I can run 8 VM's on my FX-8350 no problem (~800 processes) the bottle neck is the old boards only support 32gb of ram so this sounds like a great solution! Thanks for posting! Only downside to this is likely no Spectre or Meltdown patching available, but not a big deal since this is likely lan only.

    • @sirs4878
      @sirs4878 2 роки тому

      AMD Ryzen™ VR-Ready Premium

  • @jeffreyplum5259
    @jeffreyplum5259 4 роки тому

    This is better as a reference. Yes the price is misleading for many people. Many home Lab video people are pushing dell Rxxx solutions or Supermicro motherboards which cost even more. The T7600 will remain an Rxxx alternative as long as they are sold. I'd buy one myself, but I am making due with some low power Quad cores. The T7600 would be nice if I were going full power tower for my VMs. One secret I will be testing is a PCIE NVME adapter which supports and powers an M2 SATA SSD. The SATA SSD requires a SATA data cable to work. The card fits full or low profile cases. It can handle both a Boot NVME drive and a fast SATA SSD for VMs. I plan on using the HDDs in the system for data storage. The card will use the Video card slot in my systems doing VM / container duty. Their aging low power, low thread count processors will need all the help they can get. I believe others will ve able to strtech their old desktop systems as I am. Thanks and god protect and bless you all.

  • @nonegiven2830
    @nonegiven2830 4 роки тому +1

    ebay and government auctions are always a good for old enterprise tech

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      And local e-cyclers as well! Thanks for the comment!

  • @peterbalogh2646
    @peterbalogh2646 Рік тому

    Sounds good... until you check your electricity bill. I wonder how much would a more modern server cost with equal computing power, and how would the electricity bill look like.

  • @janegerrard1073
    @janegerrard1073 4 роки тому +1

    My budget is good for brand new servers but we also buy those used Dell workstations to do the desktop stuff. You can build and evaluate pre-deployment VMs with ease and the hardware is almost infallible. It's not just the power you get a desktop built like a server and for the money it's crazy not to buy them.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd 4 роки тому

    You're a braver man than I, entrusting that much to a random eBay seller. Last time I went for a cheap server, I went for a NewEgg open box deal. It wasn't as good a deal, but at least I had a usable return policy if it was borked... Good show!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching!

  • @rossbrigoli
    @rossbrigoli 4 роки тому +1

    $300 does not give you a virtualization server. It's more like $300 + $2000 for Ram, nvme storage, hard drive.

    • @sirs4878
      @sirs4878 2 роки тому

      Perfect Answer Sir!

  • @spieldings
    @spieldings 4 роки тому

    Hey, yes this is more what I need. The new expensive stuff is easy to get, but your build is awesome! Nice thought.

  • @ZoruaZorroark
    @ZoruaZorroark 3 роки тому

    it seems like the price for these bad boys has risen since the making of the vid, and by no small amount

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  3 роки тому

      Sadly enough that’s EXACTLY what happened!

  • @adamsiek6438
    @adamsiek6438 4 роки тому +4

    Things like this are perfect I'd love to see more videos working on servers keep it up guys. New sub

    • @juri14111996
      @juri14111996 4 роки тому

      please look at other channels to, the make some stuff the wrong way.

    • @adamsiek6438
      @adamsiek6438 4 роки тому

      @@juri14111996 huh?

    • @juri14111996
      @juri14111996 4 роки тому

      @@adamsiek6438 ua-cam.com/users/TheTecknowledge
      The have great videos about freenas and xcp-ng.

    • @adamsiek6438
      @adamsiek6438 4 роки тому +3

      @@juri14111996Oh I am. Not concerned about learning, from the video. I'm in IT with tons of certs. If I was going to set something up I would read the docs. Videos are great, but no one video will cover everything. I'm just was entertained by it.

  • @zackmatulis4094
    @zackmatulis4094 2 роки тому

    Just picked one of these up from a junk yard today for 10 bucks. Hoping it runs! It's a lower end model with a single CPU, single Invidia GPU, 32 gigs of RAM and a Velociraptor HHD
    Absolutely massive machine, hope I can find matching CPUs and some 32GB sticks of RAM to get the full 512 gigs in there lmao

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому +1

      They’re great systems!

    • @zackmatulis4094
      @zackmatulis4094 2 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek Can't wait to test it out, gotta find a Display Port to HDMI cable or something before I can hook it up and see if it actually functions but I'm super stoked. Current PC is an older eMachines case fitted with a nice Asus board, Asus graphics, Intel i3, Crucial RAM and twin Barracuda hard drives. I originally went to the junk yard looking for some upgrades and was lucky enough to find a few i5s and some bigger RAM sticks before I even stumbled upon this monster Dell
      Yep, it was a good day today lmao

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому

      Sounds like it!

  • @Minitomate
    @Minitomate 4 роки тому +2

    The potential of upgrading this machine is mind-blowing. Nevertheless you have to get all the other components at barely the cost of the computer, specially a video card if you want to virtualize multiple hosts from 1 machine.
    Even though still a very big barigain what you found. Thumbs up for that!
    And how you can fusionate 2 or more computers in one big to be able to do the same thing as one PC that is way powerful?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +3

      It's the magic of virtualization! There is just so much power in modern hardware these days that we just don't unlock running one OS on it at a time. A platform like the T7600 is a great place to play with virtualization and fully unlock all of that potential with multiple VMs at a time! Thanks so much for watching and the comment!

  • @rfrancoi
    @rfrancoi 4 роки тому +2

    Excellent video; very informative.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @randomweirdyoutubechannel8955
    @randomweirdyoutubechannel8955 4 роки тому

    I'm still proud of my new little rig 8gb of ram and a4 pro 7300b sandisk ultra 2 480gb ssd all for £30

  • @drcyb3r
    @drcyb3r 3 роки тому

    I just built myself a 2011-3 based System with DDR4 and 2 12 core Xeons. I used cheap used parts and it wasn't much more expencive then the pc built in the video.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  3 роки тому

      That's awesome! It's amazing how much power you can get for your money these days! Thanks for watching!

  • @wakkadakkaify
    @wakkadakkaify 4 роки тому +7

    a modern ryzen with 8 cores will do just fine for VM host at home - at a much lower cost in terms of energy used and hardware needed. Not to mention faster storage available etc. Old machines are cool but if you are looking for bang for your buck theyre not worth it in the long run.

    • @johnmadsen37
      @johnmadsen37 4 роки тому

      Yeah. Any cpu can do virtualization. This guy is just a UA-cam guy. Nothing more. His facial expressions are distracting. Like he is trying to look ‘sincere’ but really looks like he is ready to cry.

    • @bogdahn689
      @bogdahn689 3 роки тому

      In therms of energy, i think you can use an old cheap server many years before reaching the amount of energy to produce a new server.

    • @sirs4878
      @sirs4878 2 роки тому

      How many VMs Ryzen 5950X can run?

    • @wakkadakkaify
      @wakkadakkaify 2 роки тому

      @@sirs4878 odd question. It depends on what kind of vm, how CPU intensive etc etc there's 100 answers

  • @retrogamer426
    @retrogamer426 2 роки тому

    Hi, great video by the way. I have the Dell Precision T3600, and its been over a year that its been running 24/7. How long do these refurbished servers last for?

  • @LowJackAP
    @LowJackAP 3 роки тому

    straight savage!! Great video guys a lot of good ideas.

  • @scottz45
    @scottz45 4 роки тому

    Thanks for the info. I used this as a guide to get my new(used) server off the ground but I went with Unraid. I love the docker approach when a VM is over kill.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      That's great to hear! It's really important to us that people get something out of our work, thank you for letting us know the video helped!

  • @nandulalkrishna923
    @nandulalkrishna923 4 роки тому +2

    You didn't show us the operation videos , is it quieter than the old one ?.
    Great project thi

    • @alv1nxx
      @alv1nxx 3 роки тому

      I want to know that as well ! ... it's a shame you haven't got an answer

  • @pkf4124
    @pkf4124 4 роки тому +1

    I ve been using old tech servers for some time. Its great get something just out of manufacturers warranty but for change, instead of several grand. Plus you can upgrade for cheap too.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      I had been doing this with servers for years too, but never seriously considered using workstations till now! This has been such a success that I probably will never go back to server hardware again. Thanks for watching!

    • @pkf4124
      @pkf4124 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek Ive ironically used servers as workstations.... Fujitsu servers, that I have used all happily run windows 8 and 10. found this out by accident when I booted up a spare drive in mine by accident.
      Hyper v works very well and the two SAS cards I got for free :) work well. even has a dual screen graphics card and sound. I work as an IT engineer so comming across"old" tech is a work hazard and one I often benefit from. seconhand is great.

  • @HafzaProductions2019
    @HafzaProductions2019 Рік тому

    Great workstation.

  • @raresmarin129
    @raresmarin129 2 роки тому

    Hi, I love the video it is very informative! I would love to know how much power it uses? I am thinking of building one where I would initially only use it as a NAS server although I am not sure what I should expect to pay for my electrical bill. I love that it is so scalable and I would be interested in running some VM's in the future. I would really appreciate if you could give me a rough estimation of energy consumption for running a NAS, thank you and keep up the grate videos!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому +1

      This chassis has a 1300W PSU, but we never - even when fully loaded - came close to that consumption. We'd been asked quite a bit over time how much the system used while running and if memory serves it rarely crested 300W of usage. Of course, what you put into it will affect the consumption, so if you toss in a couple high-powered GPUs your mileage will vary. Best of luck and thanks for watching!

  • @brekkurz
    @brekkurz 5 років тому +3

    Shouldn't use RAID5 or RAID6 for SSD arrays due to excessive parity writing. SSD arrays are much better on RAID10.
    In general RAID5 is totally antiquated. RAID10 provides the same redundancy with higher speeds with lower wear on SSD's. As data stores get larger single parity cannot be considered reliable, requiring either RAID6 or alternate specialty fire system solutions (ZFS, BTRFS, Unraid, etc.)
    As an aside, RAID10 also benefits from the mirroring technique of redundancy. Rebuilding (copying) a mirror is much less demanding on a RAID than rebuilding with parity which places higher demands on multiple other drives increasing risk of additional drive failures.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  5 років тому +1

      These are great points! The only real downside to RAID10 is the disk cost. In my current config 6x500GB@RAID5 comes out to about 2.5TB, and at RAID10 is 1.5TB. Thanks for the comment!

  • @robert-cope
    @robert-cope Рік тому

    Great video. Thanks. Will your server run the latest games in 2022 with a decent GPU added? I ask, since the video is now 3 years old, and the server's release date was 2012 as you mentioned. I'm wondering how it copes with Windows 11 Pro on one VM running alongside another VM for gaming? I'd love to find out how it actually performs today?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  Рік тому +1

      With a decent GPU it would perform fine as a gaming rig as most of the heavy lifting in gaming is done on the GPU. It would run Win 10 fine, but Microsoft doesn’t support the processors in that box for Windows 11. There are workarounds but YMMV on that.

    • @robert-cope
      @robert-cope Рік тому

      @@2GuysTek Thanks for responding :) Today, I just purchased an old Dell PowerEdge T320, Intel Xeon E5-2470 v2, 48GB DDR3, H310, 8x 3TB SAS. I'm just waiting for delivery now. Will look at upgrading the GPU as suggested. Maybe, something like an RX 570/580 from Aliexpress, or used on Ebay. I have to ensure compatibility with the box first. I heard there was an issue with having to change a power cable if the GPU is powered from the Dell PSU. I have no idea at this stage.

  • @herbertvaughn5738
    @herbertvaughn5738 3 роки тому

    first-timer; liked very much. Wanted to know more about noise and power consumption? Been looking for a budget vm-server/everything else backup for home lab. Again thanks for the skooling.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  3 роки тому +1

      When we tested power consumption it came in at ~400W of power. And because this is a workstation, it was designed to sit at a desk in and office, so it's quiet.

  • @FastRedPonyCar
    @FastRedPonyCar 4 роки тому

    Bare minimum, buy another 700 series dell, put a PERC H700 card in to gain support for drives bigger than 2tb and load it with 6 of the biggest drives you can, setup Open media vault as a VM and create some big virtual drives for it in VM ware. Configure them in OMV as SMB shares and then setup a cheap desktop PC with an old quad core i7 and a basic low end gaming GPU (I use a 750ti) and install plex on that and map windows to the OMV file shares to be the home of your plex library.
    Use that new dell you got for all other stuff but plex needs it’s own dedicated box if you plan to transcode any 4K content. I learned the hard way.

  • @dodusuau
    @dodusuau 4 роки тому +4

    where to get the 8 disk drive bay from???

    • @AchwaqKhalid
      @AchwaqKhalid 4 роки тому

      I second this question...

    • @dodusuau
      @dodusuau 4 роки тому

      @@AchwaqKhalid I found it here the links
      www.ebay.com/itm/293199542565
      www.amazon.com/dp/B00TL4US8K/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_u9amFb1DV8AHK

  • @sherwinm
    @sherwinm 4 роки тому

    Dual xeon at $300 is a deal. I checked your ebay link. They’re not those prices at the moment but I’m gonna keep my out. This is a good idea. Smaller footprint and quieter than the dell r700 series

    • @juri14111996
      @juri14111996 4 роки тому

      i just found 3 HP Proliant G6 with betwen 144 and 200GB Ram, each Server has dual CPU installed. just no drives.
      but its fine storage will be in a storage only Server.

    • @sirs4878
      @sirs4878 2 роки тому

      How many VMs Ryzen 5950X can run?

    • @sherwinm
      @sherwinm 2 роки тому

      @@sirs4878 i'm currently using ryzen 2600 (not X) running proxmox with 64GB ram. i have 5 VMs and 2 LXCs running. CPU resource wise, it's barely hitting 15% usage. though i'm not running anything "heavy". mainly pihole, VOIP server for home, proxy server, docker server. i'll run out of ram before i worry about cpu usage.

  • @markarca6360
    @markarca6360 4 роки тому +1

    Instead of costly VMWare ESXi, why not opt to XCP-ng (formerly Citrix XenServer) or Proxmox VE??? Those are the other viable options aside from ESXi. The choice is up to you whatever hypervisor you want to install.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Those are great options as well! There are a few reasons I went with VMware, one being that working with it in my #homelab helps keep me sharp in my professional work life.

  • @Squash_Man
    @Squash_Man 2 роки тому

    So do all the T7600 have the usb connection on the motherboard to boot from?

  • @2GuysTek
    @2GuysTek  5 років тому +7

    **Here are some of the parts we used in the build:
    **
    T7600s on eBay: ebay.us/qJPI5H
    PCIe 4x to M.2 SSD card: amzn.to/2Ha0QGQ
    Mini-SAS to SATA cable: amzn.to/2Zg8CZS

    • @blazerrosario5187
      @blazerrosario5187 3 роки тому

      Do you have a video showing how to install ESXI on the computer

  • @Florin76
    @Florin76 4 роки тому +2

    Guys, don't understand why you bother with proprietary ESXi instead of XCP-NG or unRAID?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +2

      The biggest reason is that working with ESXi as part of my #homelab keeps me sharp for working with VMware professionally in my day job. Thanks for watching! -R

    • @juri14111996
      @juri14111996 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek why not a seperate Storage only Server?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      @@juri14111996 we technically have that already with our #Synology NAS. We use NFS datastore mounts from ESXi to volumes hosted on the NAS for VMs with big slow disks. Unfortunately the NAS only has a 4x1Gbit LACP trunk to the network so it's read/write rate isn't anywhere near what we can store on the internal NVMe.

  • @strokerace563
    @strokerace563 2 роки тому

    I was checking into getting a home server running and really liked the one you reviewed here and hoping you could answer a couple questions please .
    1st can this server / work station be updated for high speed newer gen cpus for high specs gaming ? If so which cpus could I get the most out of this system along with any other upgrades that has come about since this video you posted ?
    I was very curios about the size and running 2 high end gpus I’m assuming this would be a crossfire method that could utilize two gpus on one system ?
    Crossfire for modern pcs is now obsolete so I’m hoping this is a method that can still support the 2 cpu and 2 gpu approach . I’m concerned about building a server that does not meet my high end needs is why I ask ,
    Great video please let me know your thoughts it will be greatly appreciated .
    Thank you !

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому +1

      Great questions, here's some answers:
      1) The server is upgradeable, but only within its current generation. This is a first generation (v1) E5-26xx Sandy Bridge Xeon and while Intel made the v1 chipsets capable of running v2 CPUs, Dell does not and locks the BIOS to only allow v1 E5-26xx CPUs. That being said, you could always get the best CPU of that generation to throw into this chassis, those would be the Xeon E5-2687W CPUs which are 8-core CPUs - Still pretty fantastic chips and probably pretty affordable.
      2) To your GPU question - The workstation has a 1kW PSU in it, so it's capable of running a pretty good variety of GPUs. Keep in mind that Dell says it has 600W-worth of PCIe power for GPUs. I can't speak to whether AMD's crossfire will work or not.
      Here's a link to Dell's hardware specs for the T7600: www.dell.com/support/kbdoc/en-us/000139598/hardware-specifications-for-the-precision-t7600-desktop-workstation
      This is a great system for the price and still is a great performance, though it's getting old by today's standards. I hope this helps! Thanks for the question, consider subscribing, and best of luck! -R

    • @strokerace563
      @strokerace563 2 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek Great stuff and thank you so much for sharing your vast amount of knowledge with a incredible fast response . To me that is very rare and speaks highly to your character .
      I’m subscribed and will be looking forward to watching more of your content .
      Kind regards ,
      StrokerAce

  • @sharpfork
    @sharpfork 4 роки тому

    Great video, subbed. I found it because I have similar needs and am looking at a T7610, r720, or r720xd.
    A few questions:
    - I imaging your t7600 has ECC memory, is that what you have laying around? Might want to call something like this out.
    - why did you choose the T700 over the T7610?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      You're 100% right on the ECC RAM requirement - That's an important catch, thank you! The R710 server we were running as the primary ESXi host had compatible RAM as they're around the same generation.
      And to your question about why a T7600 over a T7610? It was just money. At the time there were no 'affordable' T7610s on the market. In some cases they were like $300-500 over the $300 T7600 we found. Unfortunately now it looks like even finding a T7600 at the price we bought ours looks hard to do. I did find one almost identical to the chassis we bought but it was going for $400. ebay.to/31k2AGq I'm hoping prices settle back down here soon. Thanks for the question!

  • @McBomber711
    @McBomber711 4 роки тому +1

    Hi, just found your channel and love the video! I have a few questions about your setup.
    I believe you mentioned it quickly but did you have to add a discrete graphics card for this setup to work?
    Can you connect a total of 12 drives? 4 on each SAS and then 4 from the hot swap bays?
    Are 10TB HDD supported?
    Thanks again, you got a new subscriber!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      Hi Micah, thanks for the comment! We did have to add a discrete GFX card as the chassis didn't come with one when we bought it from eBay - That being said, the card we put in it was very, very low end, just a basic Nvidia 2-port Quattro we had laying around.
      Regarding the SAS connections, the board has 2x mini-SAS connections which would let you do a total of 8 SAS/SATA connected drives. You can connect those however you'd like, with 4 going to the hot swaps and then 4 more going to a high density 5.25" disk bay like we used. The built-in disk controller only does a software RAID, which isn't supported by ESXi, so if you want to do a proper RAID-5, 6, or 10, get yourself a RAID card for cheap on eBay as well to allow you to build the array of your dreams!
      We didn't test 10TB disks, only 5TB, but I don't see a reason that they won't be supported - this chassis isn't old enough that it would have a limitations on the disk size. Here's Dell's specs for the platform: www.dell.com/support/article/us/en/04/sln290764/hardware-specifications-for-the-precision-t7600-desktop-workstation?lang=en

  • @Squash_Man
    @Squash_Man Рік тому

    I am not understanding how you got all eight 2.5" drives connected to one SAS connector. If the 3.5" disks are connected to the other SAS connector the cable you have only allows you to connect 4 of the 2.5" SATA drives to the other SAS connector.

  • @MrNpkellogg
    @MrNpkellogg 3 роки тому

    You mean $300 new??? oh, now I see the comments, and this is making more sense. Nothing that big should cost that little.

  • @christopherbane7162
    @christopherbane7162 2 роки тому

    I purchased a T7600 and it only has 1 sata power adapter. How did you add a sata power adapter to get 2 for the ssd hard drive box that went in the 5.25 bay?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому

      There should be more SATA connectors available, if not, buy this: amzn.to/35WNAVv

  • @stoned_mosquito
    @stoned_mosquito 4 роки тому

    Guys, this is awesome video, you put up some great info. Please keep up with videos, you deserve more subs. i've upvoted and subscribed, and im gonna tell my friends.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      That’s awesome! This keeps us going!

  • @PlankensNetworkingTutorials
    @PlankensNetworkingTutorials 4 роки тому +1

    I am considering buying one of these for myself. Thanks for the video! Can you make a video recording how the VM’s preform? Make run some bench marks on the VM’s I’d really appreciate it!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      We released another video talking about the VMs that we run and what they're used for. We only lightly touch on the performance though: ua-cam.com/video/isstb48YNFg/v-deo.html That being said, we'll add this to the list of ideas! There is a lot of interest in how well systems like this perform. Thanks for the comment!

  • @JoergSi
    @JoergSi 4 роки тому +2

    nice idea, the same machine has a price tag at German eBay of 1.300,- €, congratulations to the cheap buy!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      That’s a serious bummer! Are the equivalent HP workstations any cheaper? I know that HP has a higher market penetration in Europe than Dell. Check those out and see if they’re more affordable! Thanks for watching!

    • @McTroyd
      @McTroyd 4 роки тому +1

      Specifically, the magic search term you want is "Proliant." It's a brand they got when they acquired Compaq. HP Enterprise still sells Proliant servers; used ones can be quite cheap.

    • @JoergSi
      @JoergSi 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek still don't know how you have done this, following your link to the US eBay the price tag for the dual Xeon is 1150 and more $, good fetch!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Joerg S the crazy thing is when I originally started searching for a system these prices were just average. Sure there were some high-priced ones, but a majority were in the $300-500 USD range. I look now and I can’t believe how much the average price is!

    • @JoergSi
      @JoergSi 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek It is as it is :-) I believe you that you had paid 300 $ for the system. Because of videos like yours the demand rises, and in parallel the price, this is called capitalism ;-)
      All the best from Germany. A really nice video that gave me the crazy idea to build something similar, but with one exception, I'm aiming for unraid. Why have you chosen ESXi?

  • @mpsii
    @mpsii 4 роки тому

    Do you do any passthrough to video cards? I have a t7910 with dual 8 core Xeons. I am looking to set up 2 virtualized desktops using this single system and have concerns about bluetooth and USB compatibility.

  • @ericmartin6519
    @ericmartin6519 Рік тому

    I have the same host, having issues with ESXI boot after install. what version of ESXI did you install and how did you format the boot drive, also what boot method are you using (legacy/eufi) and any specific “gotchyas” in the bios you ran into?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  Рік тому +1

      We used BIOS boot as the boot method, and we targeted an internal USB stick inside. This was v6.5 of ESXi. What is your boot target? That generation of Precision host doesn’t support booting from NVMe, so you need to use a SATA-cabled disk.

    • @ericmartin6519
      @ericmartin6519 Рік тому

      @@2GuysTek wow thanks for responding back so quick! I actually got it working today using version 6.5 update 3, from the custom ISO Dell EMC download option in VMware’s site. Was able to copy a license key I had from a 6.7 version host I had so we’re up and running 🙌🙌 . Was hoping to use v7 but it sounds like there’s a lot of jumping through hoops to get that to work on the T7600.

  • @TheKeirsunishi
    @TheKeirsunishi 2 роки тому

    Did you guys flash the raid controller? Have a similar setup with the sata to sas wire and i cant seem to get xfs working

  • @SuburbanBBQ
    @SuburbanBBQ 4 роки тому +2

    The T7600 is an excellent machine and extremely expandable. My single XEON example has been beefed up quite a bit with Ebay parts. The parts are absolutely dirt cheap.

  • @h2oaddict28
    @h2oaddict28 4 роки тому

    I grabbed an r7 1700 with a b450 Mobo and 32gb of ram, sata cards are cheap and I have 2 m.2 slots on the board. Spent 300 euro for the combo.
    Might not be as affordable, but it's new, far less power hungry and it's upgradable, can just grab a 16 core and 128gb of ram i need to (b450 mortar).

    • @sirs4878
      @sirs4878 2 роки тому

      How many VMs Ryzen 5950X can run?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому

      Quite a few!

  • @nathandouglas7821
    @nathandouglas7821 4 роки тому

    As many have said they bought the donor for $300 there was a ton of money wrapped up in hardware they already had. Also he keeps saying furture proof.. I find this hard to believe as you are already starting off with 10vms. The host needs at least 4 cores of your 32 which leaves 2-3 cores for all your vms if spread out evenly. That may work for you needs now (although i cannot understand how) but were is the future proofing headroom here?

  • @manimasood1
    @manimasood1 3 роки тому

    Hi, I saw your video almost 1.5 year later - what would you do differently today? Would you still use the Dell T7600s as your base or would you opt for something different.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks for the question! The T7600 really has been a quality system for our needs. The platform has been entirely reliable since we put this video out. We actually just replaced it recently though, here's the video for that: ua-cam.com/video/rbTx0-ZjXGE/v-deo.html if you're interested. And to be honest with you, the only reason we upgraded was to continue to stay current with the hardware support from VMware moving forward beyond ESXi 7. We did miss not having a DRAC/iLO/OOB interface for the host. If there was a way to add or install and out-of-band management controller then the system would have been practically perfect.
      When the decision was made to move to something newer we didn't go with another Precision T-series because the cost was just too high. Sadly the world has caught on to the value of using a workstation as a virtual server and now the prices for what you get are even higher than a rack server with more power (which is why we moved back to a rack server).

  • @Shkunk1
    @Shkunk1 4 роки тому

    Nice!

  • @Shane-Singleton
    @Shane-Singleton 4 роки тому

    If you're running a Plex or Emby VM you may want to install some kind of graphics card and use it as a passthrough for transcoding. This will take a ton of work off of your CPU's and let them take care of the day to day functions of the VM's themselves. Even cards that run on 75w PCIe power will get you a lot of benefit, there. No need to drop in a 2080ti (most server and workstations don't have power provisions for the PCI power that is needed for the bigger cards anyway unless specifically ordered like that)
    It's good that you were able to pick that thing up for $300. I've got a stack of Dell Poweredge servers under my desk. One of them is a R710 like you guys have. And they are very useful. Although without knowing the specs you're upgrading from in your R710 it's kind of hard to determine if the juice is worth the squeeze. As far as noise. They're in the garage so that's really a problem?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      I was under the impression that hardware transcoding in plex on Linux was still broken, is that not the case anymore? I would be more than happy to passthrough a GPU if I knew that had been resolved.

    • @Shane-Singleton
      @Shane-Singleton 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek Not sure about linux. The people that I know that are doing it are all using windows based installations. Some native, some using passthrough on a hyperviser.

  • @goldbrick2751
    @goldbrick2751 4 роки тому

    Great video, super setup, I was wondering since you are booting the server from a stick, doesnt the VM have to be on the same? Do you think I can setup a Proxmox like this?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks for the question! In ESXi you only use the stick to boot the hypervisor and that's all, so think of it as the ESXi boot disk and nothing more. ESXi loads into memory and stops using the USB stick after that initial load. All VMs are stored on 'datastores' which are disks that are connected to the host via SATA or network-attached via iSCSI or NFS.
      I'm not an expert on Proxmox, but I'm willing to bet it has a similar feature to do the same thing. Typically a hypervisor (a generic name for an OS that just runs virtual machines) is designed to be small, light-weight, and run with the smallest footprint possible to leave as many resources as possible for the VMs it's running.

  • @rdsii64
    @rdsii64 2 роки тому

    I know this is an old video but I do have a question. Can that box be turned sideways and put in a rack?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому +1

      100% yes it can. In fact it actually has rubber feet on the backside if you wanna change the orientation.

    • @rdsii64
      @rdsii64 2 роки тому

      @@2GuysTekBecause of space constraints my desk isn't that large. My solution was to rack everything. I have a 25U startech rack in my mancave. So far all that's in it is my media server and my daily driver. I've been wanting to learn linux but didn't want to mess with dual booting. Since the T7600 is dirt cheap and will fit in my rack, Ebay here I come! Next stop Pop!Os.

  • @burgundyhome7492
    @burgundyhome7492 2 роки тому

    So how's the noisy fan at the start of the video. Curious how'd you managed to tone it down?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому +1

      It quiets down and is no louder than a normal workstation.

  • @asaitasai4585
    @asaitasai4585 4 роки тому +2

    How many electricity power used this system? In a month if system not hard work?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      Electrical rates are different in different parts of the world, so this is a tough question to answer. Where we are we're charged .11 cents a kW/hr. This system uses about the same amount of power as a high-powered desktop and as such we don't notice it's power consumption any more than our other desktops. Thanks for the question!

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Here's a more concrete answer: At the current run rate, the system is using around 300-400W depending on its workload. The UPS reports that at the current run rate it's consuming around $1/day or $30/mo depending on the number of days in the month. Like I mentioned earlier, here where I live in the US 1kW/hr costs $.11.

  • @zachray
    @zachray 4 роки тому +4

    The first 2 vms you showed in the beginning, used for file share and storage, what were they? I also have R720 but we're using dropbox for convenience..

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +2

      We have a Nexcloud instance that we use for transferring and syncing data between Jon and I. It looks, functions, and does everything Dropbox does - but has so many more features and apps to it! We even run a kanban board on it! It's completely free, fully functional, and regularly updated. If you have storage on your R720, and you have a good Internet connection give it a shot!

  • @alanamado8087
    @alanamado8087 2 роки тому

    Which removeable (6) drive bay did you use?

  • @DavidHitchcockJr
    @DavidHitchcockJr 4 роки тому

    Great video!

  • @AI-xi4jk
    @AI-xi4jk 4 роки тому

    I’m looking for a DL/Machine Learning chassis to put something like a couple of 1080ti into it. Would this workstation be a good option? I’m fine with rack mount options as well. Ideally I’d buy some used server/workstation that can fit large GPU cards, has enough memory capacity and enough CPU PCIe lanes to support cards.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      This would be a perfect option for that! In fact, I wouldn't recommend buying a rack mounted server as you'll likely have restrictions that would prevent you from installing two full-length GPUs. Workstations like this one have plenty of GPU length for cards and this system has a 1300W PSU so it has plenty of power budget for 2x 1080Ti cards.

  • @BudgetGamerz
    @BudgetGamerz 4 роки тому +1

    Almost a year later but respect on your build. I like smart spending.

  • @grenvillephillips6998
    @grenvillephillips6998 4 роки тому +1

    Nice editing, good content!

  • @rashadrivera100
    @rashadrivera100 11 місяців тому

    Is there any way to upgrade this Dell system to support ESXi 7 or 8? Also, my PC lacks the TMP module. Can someone advise on a way to install this module for this platform?
    Thanks a bunch.

  • @Eli0569
    @Eli0569 4 роки тому

    for all that you did with this server, I think that you might of been better of using Unraid which would of given you better options with VMs, HD setup and expansion, and overall future expandability with an low overhead. I would have also move all the guts from that limiting Dell case to a more robust server case with the overall cost being just a little more. Just a suggestion...

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +2

      Great recommendations! The decision to use ESXi is driven by a few factors, but one big one is that VMware is considered THE enterprise virtualization platform for business and running this helps me continue to sharpen my professional skills and experiment with #homelab stuff that directly benefits me in my day job as well. Thanks for the recommendations!

    • @canjeero
      @canjeero Рік тому

      @@2GuysTek👍

  • @dupajasio4801
    @dupajasio4801 4 роки тому

    Good idea in general. For fun and testing. For production costs are hidden in electricity to cool the thing etc. You made it look easy but I feel it's not...

  • @babugowda1683
    @babugowda1683 2 роки тому

    Awesome presentation 😈

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  2 роки тому +1

      Thank you for watching! Consider subscribing!

    • @babugowda1683
      @babugowda1683 2 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek done

  • @TwinTailTerror
    @TwinTailTerror 4 роки тому

    Did u get it from ebay? I built a server for 90 bucks quadcore 16g ram. But i wanna host more vm. But pref it be quiet as i sleep in same room as it for now

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Yes, we did source the workstation from ebay, there's a link to the T7600 in the description.

    • @TwinTailTerror
      @TwinTailTerror 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek u guys have a discord right? Id love some help picking out some server stuff im currently on omv 5. Maybe gonna move to proxmox omv and truenas mix. I wanna host game servers and movies mostly for self and fam

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      @@TwinTailTerror discord.com/invite/Y9PB9pq Come join us!

    • @TwinTailTerror
      @TwinTailTerror 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek joined the room but its all locked up have to do all sorta reg stuff might consider changing that as i personally like my privacy where possible =3
      if not is cool i tried to friend u but i cant speak post or msg members in the room

  • @Argus10q
    @Argus10q 4 роки тому +1

    $300 is still my dream

  • @mdr721
    @mdr721 4 роки тому +2

    With great power come great electric bill

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      Baaazing!

    • @h2oaddict28
      @h2oaddict28 4 роки тому

      Sandy bridge will to that, he was just one step away from ivy bridge...

  • @WoodUCreate
    @WoodUCreate 4 роки тому

    Since you have the nas server, why not use iSCSI and access your vms stored there? Then all you need is a simple cheap pair of local drives to boot esxi in raid 1.
    Less complicated on the server, less heat, less power, likely less cost since you should already have some massive disks on the nas.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      We actually do for a few VMs that require very large disks! However, we switched from iSCSI to NFS mounts in ESXi because the iSCSI performance of the model of Synology we use was worse than NFS. Also, NFS allows for the ability to look into those volume from outside of ESXi which is helpful if we need to tail logs.

    • @temp50
      @temp50 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek NFS is also recommended by VMware and the preferred over iSCSI.

  • @TippanisSAPTraining
    @TippanisSAPTraining 11 місяців тому

    Hi , can we install ESXI 8 IN DELL T7190 ?

  • @MrAtomUniverse
    @MrAtomUniverse 4 роки тому

    if it isn't on the x16, the NVME wouldn't get the full bandwidth isn't it ?
    Do consider building a video for knowing how many disk a motherboard can support, what should we be looking at to know the limit of our mother boards.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      Great question! And the short answer is no, NVMe M.2 interfaces are only 4x PCIe interfaces. So as long as you're providing at least a 4x PCIe interface you'll be able to take advantage of the maximum speed of the SSD. Thank you for the suggestion for a video! We *LOVE* getting ideas like this! We'll add it to our list!

    • @MrAtomUniverse
      @MrAtomUniverse 4 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek AHH ok , meaning x16 can support an adapter up to 4nvme , e.g Asus Hyper .

    • @temp50
      @temp50 4 роки тому

      @@MrAtomUniverse Or with a cheaper solution if the motherboard suports PCI-E Bifurcation (logically grouping lanes on a single physical connector ). In this case you can have a cheap "dumb" connector instead of having a card with a PCI-E switch on it.

  • @ramhee98
    @ramhee98 4 роки тому +3

    nice vid👌
    i would have bought a dell r720 (i programmed a software to controll its fans so its not that loud) but hey thats also cool

    • @alv1nxx
      @alv1nxx 3 роки тому

      how did you do it ? does your software work with ESXi ? ... I have a R720 too, but it's loud as hell, I can't use it at home at all

  • @drkcodeman
    @drkcodeman 4 роки тому

    love videos like this

  • @ierosgr
    @ierosgr 4 роки тому

    I have the same server bought a few months ago with some projects in mind....using Debian as hypenvisor failed since passthrough was not an option thinking that iommu and vt-x had issues (clearly they didnt) Even in Dell forums they couldnt answer a simple question if supports iommu or not. I ending up usig unraid and everything worked as intended, Dont forget to update the bios to A16 or something. iommu groups are split by default very nice with each component to each own iommu group. Until now I m very satisfied with performance Wattage accoustics !!!! A nice addition would be to have your cpu but instead I have the 2x6 core xeon set
    PS Be extra carefull when it comes to gpu. Many supported but the width would be a problem closing up that weird left panel. I ended up with an sff x570 to pass it through to a Win 10 vm

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      All great points! Thanks for the comment! You're right about that goofy door thing. Thankfully we're not running a GPU with that much height either.

  • @Itdobekilo
    @Itdobekilo 3 роки тому

    Hey! Could you possibly help me? I'm in no room to really say i know what im doing! I am in need of a VM machine for game servers and bot hosting! I have a 500$ budget and i need a system that is high in cores and high in ram storage and data security really isn't an issue saying i wont be storing much data

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  3 роки тому

      I'd recommend joining our Discord server and start the conversation there! Here's the link: discord.gg/Y9PB9pq

  • @paulpoco22
    @paulpoco22 3 роки тому

    Cool. Looks like good upgrade for unRAID.

  • @ivandedios6598
    @ivandedios6598 4 роки тому

    I have this same system but could not for the life of me get more than 4 drives recognized by the on-board SAS controller. I'm also trying to set up pass-through mode so I can properly run ZFS on the drives but it looks like the built-in drive controller does not support this. When using an IT-mode flashed PERC H310, the BIOS would tell me that an unsupported drive controller was installed and would refuse to POST.

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому

      It sounds like maybe you have a bad embedded disk controller. By default on our system, the drives were available individually but could also be configured into a software RAID, which is awful of course. All of the channels on the mini-SAS were working for us, but software RAID isn't supported by ESXi and we wanted RAID. In the end, we ended up picking up a PERC H700 for something like $60 on eBay. This gave us the RAID we needed and the performance we expected. We've played with the H310 in the past and it's always been a disappointing card. Good luck!

  • @Sierra-Whisky
    @Sierra-Whisky 3 роки тому

    Any idea about the power consumption?

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  3 роки тому +1

      300-400W depending on the workload. Thanks for the question! Consider subscribing!

    • @Sierra-Whisky
      @Sierra-Whisky 3 роки тому

      @@2GuysTek thnx!
      Aaaaaand it's done 😉👍🏼

  • @MajorArchitect-0
    @MajorArchitect-0 4 роки тому +1

    late to the game, That was My pc in 2016 and I got it for a similar price too. I also got it for the same reason 😂 I Love virtualization

    • @2GuysTek
      @2GuysTek  4 роки тому +1

      #homelab FTW! Are you using ESXi as your hypervisor or something else? Thanks for watching!

    • @MajorArchitect-0
      @MajorArchitect-0 4 роки тому

      never truly ran ESXI on it as the primary until I sold it to a friend. I used UnRaid for a while, until I decided I wanted a different set up. Then I switched to the X99 platform with a high core count Xeon so I could have 4 graphics cards. Pretty nice now, I have dedicated USB 3.0 controllers for all my VM’s 22GB RAM per vm (96GB total), each vm has its own SSD and as mentioned 4 capable GPU’s. better yet, in a case the size of a mid tower, with water cooling. I do miss my Dell precision though, a lot of good memories. would definitely still recommend it for someone who wants to get into virtualization 100%