The first one I bought did. The next 4 did not. You'll want a v1 laying around.when you bought them did they come with the v 3.0 or newer bios for the v2 xeons? trying to decide if i have to get a v1 xeon just to flash the bios
The first one I bought did. The next 4 did not. You'll want a v1 laying around.when you bought them did they come with the v 3.0 or newer bios for the v2 xeons? trying to decide if i have to get a v1 xeon just to flash the bios
To save a couple watts I disable the SCU in the bios (not really needed or used on this model motherboard anyway -- no idea why it has one)
I wanna know what a v100 does too @Patrick any chance that’ll be benched?Does anybody have any data on performance of first gen Titan. I am getting good results with 780 Ti and was wondering how does Titan.
My guess is for $5,000, it's not going to do 2x of a $700 card.I wanna know what a v100 does too @Patrick any chance that’ll be benched?
I find that hard to believe but since Patrick liked your reply perhaps there’s someMy guess is for $5,000, it's not going to do 2x of a $700 card.
You would need a crypto algorithm optimized for fused-multiply-add -- the tensor cores provide LOADS of performance on that type of calculation. Currently that is a very useful calculation for deep learning. Not so much for gaming or crypto. For "normal" calculations or memory-bandwidth-limited algorithms, I would expect a boost of 2x maximum, and usually a lot less.I find that hard to believe but since Patrick liked your reply perhaps there’s some
nda making him not say one way or the other.
I’d think with an nvidia friendly coin/algo itd do really well
So the auction says it supports GPUs; I see risers with 2 full length slots in the back, but looking at pictures of the bare motherboard it looks pretty short. I'm sure the blower style cards would do better in this environment, but does anyone know the max card length that would fit, as well as PCIe power headers available on this chassis?
On the Supermicro Web Page for the 6027TR-DTRF, Keynote 7 indicates"Support 1 Full-height PCI-E x16 GPU card per node w/ GPU Kit".So the auction says it supports GPUs;
Thanks. So after looking at the GPU kit notes and then looking at the auction, the servers aren't set up for it out of the box. The riser is there, but the CPU heatsinks are 2u tall instead of the slim design with shroud that comes in the GPU kit. The kit looks pretty good (x2 8 pin adapters & pretty long) though I agree with @mjygvfesz that it's too spendy for our applications.On the Supermicro Web Page for the 6027TR-DTRF, Keynote 7 indicates"Support 1 Full-height PCI-E x16 GPU card per node w/ GPU Kit".
The optional GPU kit is MCP-420-21709-0N.
There's a link at the top of the page to the GPU Installation Kit Guide, and the installation details look pretty straight forward.
This is not going to support GPUs without the "gpu kit" which is hard to find and more expensive than the servers themselves.So the auction says it supports GPUs; I see risers with 2 full length slots in the back, but looking at pictures of the bare motherboard it looks pretty short. I'm sure the blower style cards would do better in this environment, but does anyone know the max card length that would fit, as well as PCIe power headers available on this chassis?
I'd love to configure these as combined CPU/GPU nodes.![]()
Let me know what the lowest the seller take on OBO i am interested in getting a few my self.I’ve got an offer pending we’ll see if he accepts and then I’ll take you up on it for sure.
Ah, interesting. $113 was pretty low to be honest. At $148 though, not a super value. May as well go for E5-2680v2.Let me know what the lowest the seller take on OBO i am interested in getting a few my self.
On another note does anyone noticed e5-2660v2 cpu went up from $113 to $148 wow !!!
280 plus shipping.Let me know what the lowest the seller take on OBO i am interested in getting a few my self.
On another note does anyone noticed e5-2660v2 cpu went up from $113 to $148 wow !!!
Make sense, I was eyeing the E5-2680v2 for other project, but I guess might as well for this mining fun as wellAh, interesting. $113 was pretty low to be honest. At $148 though, not a super value. May as well go for E5-2680v2.