Posted 16 April 2011 - 08:24 AM
Posted 16 April 2011 - 09:31 AM
Edited by dagamer34, 16 April 2011 - 09:36 AM.
Posted 16 April 2011 - 10:15 AM
Posted 16 April 2011 - 10:52 AM
Server - I3 550 / GA-H55-USB3 / 8 GB / 7 TB storage / WHS 2011
Main Rig - i7 2600k / GA-Z68X-UD3-B3 / 16 GB / 240 GB Agility 3 SSD / Win 7 Ult
Super Router - Supermicro X7SPE-HF-D525-O / 4 GB / 40 GB Vertex SSD / PfSense
Laptop - Cyberpower X6-9100 / i7 2670QM / 16 GB / 240 GB Samsung 840 SSD / Win 7 Pro
HP Microserver - 2008R2 - 8 GB - 250 GB
Posted 16 April 2011 - 11:20 AM
Posted 16 April 2011 - 11:29 AM
Posted 16 April 2011 - 11:50 AM
I don't care for the icy dock, so I wouldn't recommend it you don't need the space and your MOBO has enough SATA plugs for the extra drive. I also wouldn't spend money on the scorpio blacks I would just get either scorpio blue or better yet a pair of cheaper 3.5" drives. Again you have the room.
Posted 16 April 2011 - 02:24 PM
Since I've become addicted to the BYOB podcasts, I've decided my first ever computer build will be for WHS 2011. After listening and reading I've come up with the following:
Case: Antec Three Hundred ATX Mid Tower
Motherboard: GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3-B3 LGA 1155 Intel P67 SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX
CPU: Intel Core i3-2100 Sandy Bridge 3.1GHz
Memory: 4GB CORSAIR(2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 Desktop Memory Model CMV4GX3M2A1333C9
OS Drives: 2 ea. Western Digital Scorpio Black WD2500BEKT 250GB set to RAID 1 inside an ICY DOCK MB982SPR-2S
Data Drives: 4 ea. Western Digital Caviar Green WD20EADS 2TB set to RAID 5 using the motherboard controller
Video Card: Radeon HD 4350 512MB GDDR2 PCIe 2.0 x16
DVD Drive: LG Black 10X BD-ROM 16X DVD-ROM 48X CD-ROM SATA Internal Blu-ray Drive Model UH12LS28
Power Supply: CORSAIR Builder Series CX600 (CMPSU-600CX) 600W ATX12V v2.3 Active PFC
Am I even in the ballpark with this setup? Also, I've been reading that consumer hard drives are not reliable in a RAID 5 array but everyone here seems to be using them. Should I be worried enough to buy enterprise drives?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Main Server - WHS 2011, Core I5-2500, 12T RAID 5 (5x3T) + 2T of Mirror + 2T of backup
Second Server - 2008R2, Core I5-2500, 12T RAID 5
Main Systems - Core I7-2600k, 16 Gigs DDR3-1600, 180 Gig Intel 330 SSD Max IOPS 240 Gig Vertex 3, 2T Sata 3 for local Backup
Other systems - Core I7-2600, Core I3-530's, Core I5-2500, Core I7-920, Core I3-2100, and G620 (see System List)
My Blogs - The Docs Blog and Tablet Resource
BYOB Videos - TheBYOBPodcast
For a complete system List: Computer Systems
Posted 16 April 2011 - 04:39 PM
Server - I3 550 / GA-H55-USB3 / 8 GB / 7 TB storage / WHS 2011
Main Rig - i7 2600k / GA-Z68X-UD3-B3 / 16 GB / 240 GB Agility 3 SSD / Win 7 Ult
Super Router - Supermicro X7SPE-HF-D525-O / 4 GB / 40 GB Vertex SSD / PfSense
Laptop - Cyberpower X6-9100 / i7 2670QM / 16 GB / 240 GB Samsung 840 SSD / Win 7 Pro
HP Microserver - 2008R2 - 8 GB - 250 GB
Posted 16 April 2011 - 07:15 PM
Interesting. Mine came with one in the back and one in the top, but no fans in the front.The Antec 300 actually has two fans on the front to cool the hard drives. They work pretty good.
Posted 16 April 2011 - 08:03 PM
Posted 16 April 2011 - 08:32 PM
Keep in mind this is my first foray into the building process, but the reason (as I saw it) for the icy dock was that I didn't think I had enough sata plugs for the two OS drives, the 4 data drives, and the dvd reader. The board only has six sata plugs (two 6gb and four 3gb). Am I looking at this wrong?
Thanks for the advice.
Posted 17 April 2011 - 06:47 AM
Posted 17 April 2011 - 09:53 AM
I too like the IcyDock and set it up on my server. Works great.
I bought the LIAN-LI LANCOOL CASE PC-A70F FULL TOWER for my server last night. This thing will give you plenty of space and airflow. Decided I have to transfer it out of the NZXT gaming case. The fans on that thing just scream.
Posted 17 April 2011 - 02:17 PM
Server - I3 550 / GA-H55-USB3 / 8 GB / 7 TB storage / WHS 2011
Main Rig - i7 2600k / GA-Z68X-UD3-B3 / 16 GB / 240 GB Agility 3 SSD / Win 7 Ult
Super Router - Supermicro X7SPE-HF-D525-O / 4 GB / 40 GB Vertex SSD / PfSense
Laptop - Cyberpower X6-9100 / i7 2670QM / 16 GB / 240 GB Samsung 840 SSD / Win 7 Pro
HP Microserver - 2008R2 - 8 GB - 250 GB
Posted 17 April 2011 - 04:33 PM
Very nice build. I think what you selected will be a great setup. Unlike DVN an no-control, I love my icy dock setup and am running one in my production WHS. If you want the OS mirror, you will have to use something like this as there are not enough connectors to do it via the motherboard. I really like the simplicity and pain free process of the cage especially if you if your are using the motherboard for the raid as you will need the sata connectors for the RAID setup you are doing. Make you set the BIOS to RAID before you do you install. The two white connector should be used for the DVD and Icy Dock and the remaining four for you RAID for the best setup. Great choice in your build. Also, the comments on the consumer grade of drives is very much overstated. I beat up all three of my arrays every day and do not see any issues at all. Modern controllers are a bit more robust and work fine for this kind of application. Also, you made a great selection using the EADS drives as they actually perform better in RAID than the EARS (not by much but it is a gain). I have both and have tested each. I would probably pick a better case if it was me as this case does not appear to have fans for the drives which is where you will need it the most. Sandy Bridge runs very cool but you will want to provide air flow for the drives. Look for something with 2 120/140mm fans on the front where the drives are. Lastly, as "dagamer34" stated RAID is not a backup in the truest sense and neither is putting an additional drive in your system and calling it a backup as you are prone to the same potential issues such as fire, theft,etc. Ultimate protection of critical data will come from an offsite backup via a portable drive, or online backup such as Cloudberry, Crashplan, or Keepvault so you will have to decide what works for you. If you Look forward to seeing your pictures and getting a impression of your build. Good job and thanks for listening. Great job on this and good luck.
No I missed the optical drive. I saw WHS and it automatically filters out any need for a DVD. So my revised thought would be dump both the Icy and the DVD. Just how I would do it otherwise it's on point.
Posted 17 April 2011 - 05:17 PM
Since I've become addicted to the BYOB podcasts, I've decided my first ever computer build will be for WHS 2011. After listening and reading I've come up with the following:
Case: Antec Three Hundred ATX Mid Tower
Motherboard: GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3-B3 LGA 1155 Intel P67 SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX
CPU: Intel Core i3-2100 Sandy Bridge 3.1GHz
Memory: 4GB CORSAIR(2 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 Desktop Memory Model CMV4GX3M2A1333C9
OS Drives: 2 ea. Western Digital Scorpio Black WD2500BEKT 250GB set to RAID 1 inside an ICY DOCK MB982SPR-2S
Data Drives: 4 ea. Western Digital Caviar Green WD20EADS 2TB set to RAID 5 using the motherboard controller
Video Card: Radeon HD 4350 512MB GDDR2 PCIe 2.0 x16
DVD Drive: LG Black 10X BD-ROM 16X DVD-ROM 48X CD-ROM SATA Internal Blu-ray Drive Model UH12LS28
Power Supply: CORSAIR Builder Series CX600 (CMPSU-600CX) 600W ATX12V v2.3 Active PFC
Am I even in the ballpark with this setup? Also, I've been reading that consumer hard drives are not reliable in a RAID 5 array but everyone here seems to be using them. Should I be worried enough to buy enterprise drives?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Posted 17 April 2011 - 05:50 PM
First off, it looks like you have made a good selection.
But for a reduced power consumption I would go with an integrated graphics card, in sandy bridge it is integrated in the cpu, I do however not remember what chipset is need for the igx unit to be activated,(you can always add a dedicated GFX later if needed) and a lower wattage PSU(power supply unit) 400 W from a quality PSU is plenty. I use a silverstone sst-st40f-es for my server, but seasonic is "generally" the "good" brand behind many other oem's PSU(including the original corsair PSUs).
The higher wattage PSU could easily be justified, simply because you would have an extra "gaming" grade PSU around if needed.
On another related note, I just want to remind you that AMD provides an excellent platform, with more PCI-E lanes, similar RAM performance, similar SATA performance, but currently slightly higher power requirements(+5 - 20 W for low power) unless you tweak your system; and generaly slightly cheaper.
After having said all that, I feel it is paramount that you just put something together and get some experience, and the system you have chosen, should provide you headache free usage:)
Posted 17 April 2011 - 05:57 PM
Also, technically if a power supply is well built, shouldn't it use as little power as needed? A 600W supply isn't going to draw 600W if the systems' requirements are only 250W, right?
Edited by timekills, 17 April 2011 - 05:57 PM.
Posted 17 April 2011 - 05:57 PM
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