I missed Supermicro technical support by about 10 minutes tonight and really need to find out if these parts are compatible so I thought I'd ask here.
I ordered the following Supermicro motherboard and chassis/psu as a very barebones server. When starting to build it tonight I noticed the included power supply has a 20pin main connector while the motherboard has a 24pin connection.
I based this build off of a Supermicro combo unit I linked below which contains a slightly different board/chassis/psu but are in the same class/range.
The motherboard for this combo is a X9SCL-F which also contains a 24pin power input.
The chassis for this combo is: CSE-510L-200B
The PSU for this combo is a PWS-202-1H which is also a 20pin PSU.
I was curious if anyone knows whether the included PSU for this combo is actually a different PSU than Supermicro has labeled on their website and it does in fact have a 24pin connection. If not, is it not required for this line of motherboards?
Thanks in advance.
I ordered the following Supermicro motherboard and chassis/psu as a very barebones server. When starting to build it tonight I noticed the included power supply has a 20pin main connector while the motherboard has a 24pin connection.
- Supermicro | Products | Motherboards | Xeon® Boards | X9SCM-IIF
- Supermicro | Products | Chassis | 1U | SC510-200B
I based this build off of a Supermicro combo unit I linked below which contains a slightly different board/chassis/psu but are in the same class/range.
- Supermicro | Products | SuperServers | 1U | 5017C-LF
- SUPERMICRO SYS-5017C-LF 1U Rackmount Server Barebone - Newegg.com
The motherboard for this combo is a X9SCL-F which also contains a 24pin power input.
The chassis for this combo is: CSE-510L-200B
The PSU for this combo is a PWS-202-1H which is also a 20pin PSU.
I was curious if anyone knows whether the included PSU for this combo is actually a different PSU than Supermicro has labeled on their website and it does in fact have a 24pin connection. If not, is it not required for this line of motherboards?
Thanks in advance.