Would be interested in this except I can't seem to get my board to respond to powering jumpers. Bought the JBOD "new" but the jumpers just don't seem to respond to being powered on. Went as far as replacing the every component.Does anyone here want to trade their X9DRD-7LN4F-JBOD for one of my X9DR7-LN4F boards? The difference between the two is the DR7 has 2 x16 slots, an inverse HBA layout(SAS ports on bottom instead of on top), and the LSI 2308 is in IR mode by default(can easily be flashed to IT mode). Looking to trade since I find the "optimal" fan speed to not be that low compared to the JBOD boards. Updated the BMC as well.
Are you talking about the FPIO headers for getting the system to power on from a button?Would be interested in this except I can't seem to get my board to respond to powering jumpers. Bought the JBOD "new" but the jumpers just don't seem to respond to being powered on. Went as far as replacing the every component.
Yes, cannot seem to get the pins to activate through case connector nor metal contacts on JF1 pins 1 & 2. Manual says something about a proprietary connector but I might be misunderstanding something.Are you talking about the FPIO headers for getting the system to power on from a button?
The odd part is that the LEDM1(BMC) does blink properly and pins 7&8 (LED3) does light up blue when pins are contacted however I cannot seem to get pins 1 & 2 to properly contact at all. Currently away from home so I wouldn't be able to do any physical testing until the end of this week. Thanks for the advice though.It's not a proprietary connector they just mean that the pinout is most "compatible" with Supermicro chassis since the JF1 header has some additional stuff like overheat-indicator and other stuff like LAN activity which most regular consumer cases don't have.
It should work with any 16 pin supermicro front panel connector or with any standard front panel cabling. Try flipping the power button cable connector on the pins, I was having issues with some of the LEDs not working until I flipped the front panel cables around. It definitely should work if you're sufficiently bridging the contacts with some kind of metal. Do any of the LEDs on the board light up when you have power to it like the IPMI heartbeat indicator? IIRC the JBOD board has a couple of green LEDs that should be lit or blinking if there's power.
Can't resist. Will be buying 4 more for a total of 8 now. Just grabbed an X9SRi-F for $50 as well so it's going to be a good week.Goodness gracious $63.99 today.
Put...your...wallet...away!
$50??? How???Can't resist. Will be buying 4 more for a total of 8 now. Just grabbed an X9SRi-F for $50 as well so it's going to be a good week.
eBay email alerts and dumb luck. Sadly there was only one or I would have shared.$50??? How???
I ended up printing out a long 60mm to 30mm fan adapter that rests on top of the heatsink, this gets the temp down to 35c. It does block the two top slots but they not going to be used for the foreseeable future. If I do end up using those slots I will have to get a little more creative.Looks like a nice board! Considering the onboard 10GbE Base-T, it's quite a good deal IMO.
Comparing a quad 1GbE card to a 10GbE (Base-T!!) device is kinda apples-to-oranges. That said, I'd bet that even a bit of airflow over the heatsink would be enough to keep temps under control; 12.5W really isn't a lot of heat to dissipate. Figure out a way to mount something that keeps (even a little bit of) air moving over the heatsink; it should be fine.