Ok, I guess I can try first and then add a fan after the fact. I live in a tropical country so that's one more thing to consider. Do these cards have any temp sensors?I expect if it gets any airflow at all it'll probably be fine.
Ok, I guess I can try first and then add a fan after the fact. I live in a tropical country so that's one more thing to consider. Do these cards have any temp sensors?I expect if it gets any airflow at all it'll probably be fine.
Ok then. I'm sold on a 2008!As long as you have at least a little airflow over the card's heatsink, it will be perfectly happy. The only real benefit of going with the newer card would be for adding a NAND array at some point in the future and using pcie 3
Thanks. Not sure if that would work on an ITX case like the Node 304 though but it's an option. I hope I won't need to use a fan though.The h310 is the most common and generally readily available model.
As for airflow, personally I just picked up a cheap fan pcie mount.
Something like this: PCI Side-blown Graphics Card Cooling Fan Mount Bracket for sale online | eBay
Then strapped a 120-140mm fan on it.
When does vertical vs. horizontal SAS plug orientation come into play anyway?Either the Dell H310, or the H200 would do ya, if you need the cables the other way round
When the card is installed in a low height enclosure...say a 2U high rack case for example. The bend required on the cable in order not to foul the lid, right as it exits the card, is way tighter than you would want. It's therefore better to take it from the back of the card instead. Same goes for mounting the card in a riser, where the cable is likely to foul something else entirely right beside it, like a fan or other heatsink etc. All that said, sometimes it's just neater to train your cables that wayWhen does vertical vs. horizontal SAS plug orientation come into play anyway?
I see. And if I understand you correctly, the horizontal orientation is better for the use cases you mentioned above?When the card is installed in a low height enclosure...say a 2U high rack case for example. The bend required on the cable in order not to foul the lid, right as it exits the card, is way tighter than you would want. It's therefore better to take it from the back of the card instead. Same goes for mounting the card in a riser, where the cable is likely to foul something else entirely right beside it, like a fan or other heatsink etc. All that said, sometimes it's just neater to train your cables that way
Heh, I post from the phone, so just faster than using snipping tool or similar.I'm amazed we've entered the age of people running 100TB arrays at home while screenshotting with their phones...
https://www.primeline-solutions.com...ade-pro-2-0-software-lsi00290-l5-25188-04.pdf says 512GB max capacity, who knows if that is still a limit. Bet you can spend hard cash to enable more Have you checked the proper installation of the physical dongle?
Plus: There's no Samsung 830 "Pro", since that was the only model back then.