How are you determining that it looks like a w 2155 and not the i9-79xx series? The bottom shot of both CPUs seem to look the same.Is the Xeon w-2155 multiplier locked? Saw a seller on eBay selling blank lga 2066 CPU for $30. Looked through his reviews and a few buyers mention that the CPUs work perfectly. Assuming that the pictures he posted are the same for all of the chips he has on hand, the capacitor shot looks like a Xeon w 2155. Intel Socket LGA2066 i9 Xeon W - Blank Processor | eBay
Yeah. I replied back to this thread shortly after noting that they all look the same and can't tell.How are you determining that it looks like a w 2155 and not the i9-79xx series? The bottom shot of both CPUs seem to look the same.
Thanks for any info,
jp
it could be an early stepping that doesn't want to run on an asus board (i know the 3647 ones are pedantic about that). you may want to see if you can find a supermicro or similar that is known to like pre-retail ES.No luck guys. Tried it on an x299 and also c422 board and no post. My asus c422 board had the CPU error light triggered
That's a high possibility. I will look around for one. If it works for anyone here, please let us know.it could be an early stepping that doesn't want to run on an asus board (i know the 3647 ones are pedantic about that). you may want to see if you can find a supermicro or similar that is known to like pre-retail ES.
If your not looking for a huge setup you could probably manage a pair of E5-2620 final spec CPU for that price and avoid ES/QS completely.Hello all. I recently picked up a X10DRW for a good price. So now I need to populate the sockets but cannot afford OEM CPU's. It can take e5 2600 v3/v4 and would be used for homelab and virtualization. What is the best models and sspec to keep an eye out for? Need to stay around $400 for the pair. Thanks as always.
Did the chip look just like the pictures from the listing? I should be getting one of these chips next week and will probably try it on a supermicro as they seem to be more forgiving with any type of non-stock chip. gigabyte also makes a 422 board but they may also be picky. Were your MBs know good with any other chips to compare? I recently got some epyc es chips that I was testing with some MBs that I also got off of ebay and it made for some overly complicated troubleshooting. I had some stock epyc chips and a known good mb that help it sorting things out. The es chips actually worked pretty well but the ebay MBs were not that great. I am assuming that you used the correct ram for the corresponding chipsets. Thanks for keeping us updated.No luck guys. Tried it on an x299 and also c422 board and no post. My asus c422 board had the CPU error light triggered. Definitely did not win the lottery.
My x299 is sketchy. Bought it used on ebay and it was not in the best of condition. The Asus C422 Sage Pro is pretty much brand new. They might be really early ES or just dead chips.Did the chip look just like the pictures from the listing? I should be getting one of these chips next week and will probably try it on a supermicro as they seem to be more forgiving with any type of non-stock chip. gigabyte also makes a 422 board but they may also be picky. Were your MBs know good with any other chips to compare? I recently got some epyc es chips that I was testing with some MBs that I also got off of ebay and it made for some overly complicated troubleshooting. I had some stock epyc chips and a known good mb that help it sorting things out. The es chips actually worked pretty well but the ebay MBs were not that great. I am assuming that you used the correct ram for the corresponding chipsets. Thanks for keeping us updated.
jp
Thank you. I found a single E5-2630 v4 QHVK laying around in a parts bin. Hopefully it works. I may try and pickup another of the same spec and pop those in.If your not looking for a huge setup you could probably manage a pair of E5-2620 final spec CPU for that price and avoid ES/QS completely.
were you able to figure out if these chips were the xeons or i9s? Did you try different ram with each board? I guess we could always delid them at this point! I am assuming that the xeons would be soldered and the i9 would just have thermal paste between the die and the IHS. It may very well be futile but would be great if we could get them working.I noticed that with the x299 FTW K, there was a light near the CPU labeled FIVR and that was on. I looked up the manual and that light means "Indicates CPU integrated voltage regulation failure." They're probably dead chips.
I couldn't figure out what chip it is since I couldn't get them to boot. I was using stock recommended ram for each platform to make sure that there isn't ram incompatibility. In both cases CPU was indicated by the motherboard as the issue.were you able to figure out if these chips were the xeons or i9s? Did you try different ram with each board? I guess we could always delid them at this point! I am assuming that the xeons would be soldered and the i9 would just have thermal paste between the die and the IHS. It may very well be futile but would be great if we could get them working.
best,
jp
That must be one hell of a parts bin.Thank you. I found a single E5-2630 v4 QHVK laying around in a parts bin. Hopefully it works. I may try and pickup another of the same spec and pop those in.
Haha think I have a couple of e5-2620,30,40 v3/v4 cpu’s in my parts bin... not nearly as impressive sure... suppose I should sell them but I didn’t really think they would be much in demand.That must be one hell of a parts bin.
They're in a fair bit of demand... and if no one wants them i know someone who will be glad to take them off your handsHaha think I have a couple of e5-2620,30,40 v3/v4 cpu’s in my parts bin... not nearly as impressive sure... suppose I should sell them but I didn’t really think they would be much in demand.