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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!



from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean incompetent or
intentional unthruths).


It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html


However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html

--
Jasen.
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 00:35:12 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!



from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean incompetent or
intentional unthruths).


That sounds likely.

It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html

However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html


So if the 500W failed, it would keep running, but if the 480W failed, presumably it would shut off since there's no longer any 3.3 or 5V? So unless I need more than 480W, the 500W supply is pointless, unless it makes the 480W last longer?
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On 2020-04-25, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 00:35:12 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!



from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean incompetent or
intentional unthruths).


That sounds likely.

It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html

However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html


So if the 500W failed, it would keep running, but if the 480W failed, presumably it would shut off since there's no longer any 3.3 or 5V? So unless I need more than 480W, the 500W supply is pointless, unless it makes the 480W last longer?


It would probably quit in both cases, else they would have built it
with two 480W mixed-voltage powersupplies.

the 500W 12V only supply is probably used in some other chassis, in
pairs, as a redundant powersupply, just the marketing guy is ignoring
the the fact that in this application (Dell R410) it is not redundant.

--
Jasen.
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 00:35:12 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!



from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean incompetent or
intentional unthruths).

It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html

However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html


Sorted - Im building it from spare parts, and hadnt realised you dont use both supplies. You either use just one multi-voltage one, which connects straight to the motherboard, or you use two 12V ones, with a power distribution board to make the lower voltages - eg. Ebay item https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008

Oh well, I have an extra supply now which I'll convert for GPUs.


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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 06:11:04 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-25, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 00:35:12 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!


from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean incompetent or
intentional unthruths).


That sounds likely.

It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html

However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html


So if the 500W failed, it would keep running, but if the 480W failed, presumably it would shut off since there's no longer any 3.3 or 5V? So unless I need more than 480W, the 500W supply is pointless, unless it makes the 480W last longer?


It would probably quit in both cases, else they would have built it
with two 480W mixed-voltage powersupplies.

the 500W 12V only supply is probably used in some other chassis, in
pairs, as a redundant powersupply, just the marketing guy is ignoring
the the fact that in this application (Dell R410) it is not redundant.


Sorted - Im building it from spare parts, and hadnt realised you dont use both supplies. You either use just one multi-voltage one, which connects straight to the motherboard, or you use two 12V ones, with a power distribution board to make the lower voltages - eg. Ebay item https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008

Oh well, I have an extra supply now which I'll convert for GPUs.
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On 25/04/2020 17:18, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 06:11:04 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-25, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 00:35:12 +0100, Jasen Betts
wrote:

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and
D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't
make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!


from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean
incompetent or
intentional unthruths).

That sounds likely.

It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html


However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open
the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html


So if the 500W failed, it would keep running, but if the 480W failed,
presumably it would shut off since there's no longer any 3.3 or 5V?
So unless I need more than 480W, the 500W supply is pointless, unless
it makes the 480W last longer?


It would probably quit in both cases, else they would have built it
with two 480W mixed-voltage powersupplies.

the 500W 12V only supply is probably used in some other chassis, in
pairs, as a redundant powersupply, just the marketing guy is ignoring
the the fact that in this application (Dell R410) it is not redundant.


Sorted - Im building it from spare parts, and hadnt realised you dont
use both supplies. You either use just one multi-voltage one, which
connects straight to the motherboard, or you use two 12V ones, with a
power distribution board to make the lower voltages - eg. Ebay item
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008

Oh well, I have an extra supply now which I'll convert for GPUs.


Are you building a new computer for yourself?
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0100, David_B wrote:

On 25/04/2020 17:18, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 06:11:04 +0100, Jasen Betts wrote:

On 2020-04-25, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 00:35:12 +0100, Jasen Betts
wrote:

On 2020-04-23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
It's an old Dell R410, with supplies DPS-500RB (12V only) and
D480E-S0 (12/5/3.3V). If the second one died, the first one can't
make the server still run, as there's no 5V or 3.3V!


from the manual:

" 4.1 Power Supplies
" The R410 is powered by a non-redundant 480 W power supply (Dell P/N
" F238K) and redundant 500 W power supply (Dell P/N F649J).

Seems to be some sort of marketing speak (by which I mean
incompetent or
intentional unthruths).

That sounds likely.

It seems the 500W unit is hotplugabble and can replaced from the back
of the machine (like on machines with redundant power-supplies)
https://picclick.com/LOT-OF-2-Dell-H...031920537.html


However the 480W is cabled to the main board and you need to open
the case and
unlug the cables to replace it.
https://www.blackmoreit.com/h410jd48...-d480e-s0.html


So if the 500W failed, it would keep running, but if the 480W failed,
presumably it would shut off since there's no longer any 3.3 or 5V?
So unless I need more than 480W, the 500W supply is pointless, unless
it makes the 480W last longer?

It would probably quit in both cases, else they would have built it
with two 480W mixed-voltage powersupplies.

the 500W 12V only supply is probably used in some other chassis, in
pairs, as a redundant powersupply, just the marketing guy is ignoring
the the fact that in this application (Dell R410) it is not redundant.

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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On 25/04/2020 17:53, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0100, David_B
wrote:

[....]
Are you building a new computer for yourself?


Yes, a 24 core Xeon system.Â* It will run the Rosetta Coronavirus
research program, and when that's done, something else in biology or
physics.

In hindsight, it would have been cheaper to buy a crap version of the
server and upgrade a few parts.Â* I've had to get some difficult to find
brackets and adapters, like these:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392344221117
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/161787339477
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/372999585133


That's a very noble thing to be doing. THANK YOU.

I'll have a study here and see what I could do personally to help:-

https://medium.com/ankr-network/ankr...a-83d36134e248
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 22:15:52 +0100, David_B wrote:

On 25/04/2020 17:53, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0100, David_B
wrote:

[....]
Are you building a new computer for yourself?


Yes, a 24 core Xeon system. It will run the Rosetta Coronavirus
research program, and when that's done, something else in biology or
physics.

In hindsight, it would have been cheaper to buy a crap version of the
server and upgrade a few parts. I've had to get some difficult to find
brackets and adapters, like these:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392344221117
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/161787339477
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/372999585133


That's a very noble thing to be doing. THANK YOU.


I was already doing it for fun and to help out astrophysics projects, I added Rosetta to the mix when the virus appeared. You can set up Boinc with as many projects as you wish and alter the priority of each.

It's a pity these projects don't hand out money (to at least cover the cost of electricity), then I think they'd get 10 times as many people doing it. They already have a brilliant system so you can see how much work you've done, and if you're doing better than others, so it would be easy to apply a small amount of money to that.

I'll have a study here and see what I could do personally to help:-

https://medium.com/ankr-network/ankr...a-83d36134e248


I believe the program will run on any CPU under Windows, MacOS, or Linux. If you have a good graphics card, you should go for Folding at home instead, as it can use that too.

Even mobile phones running android can run Rosetta. Not sure what you can run on Iphones.


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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 22:50:07 +0100, "Commander Kinsey"
wrote:

On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 22:15:52 +0100, David_B wrote:

On 25/04/2020 17:53, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0100, David_B
wrote:

[....]
Are you building a new computer for yourself?

Yes, a 24 core Xeon system. It will run the Rosetta Coronavirus
research program, and when that's done, something else in biology or
physics.

In hindsight, it would have been cheaper to buy a crap version of the
server and upgrade a few parts. I've had to get some difficult to find
brackets and adapters, like these:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392344221117
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/161787339477
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/372999585133


That's a very noble thing to be doing. THANK YOU.


I was already doing it for fun and to help out astrophysics projects, I added Rosetta to the mix when the virus appeared. You can set up Boinc with as many projects as you wish and alter the priority of each.

It's a pity these projects don't hand out money (to at least cover the cost of electricity), then I think they'd get 10 times as many people doing it. They already have a brilliant system so you can see how much work you've done, and if you're doing better than others, so it would be easy to apply a small amount of money to that.

I'll have a study here and see what I could do personally to help:-

https://medium.com/ankr-network/ankr...a-83d36134e248


I believe the program will run on any CPU under Windows, MacOS, or Linux. If you have a good graphics card, you should go for Folding at home instead, as it can use that too.

Even mobile phones running android can run Rosetta. Not sure what you can run on Iphones.


Be sure to ask BD what his configuration/hardware is on the
machine he sets it up on.
He loves technical stuff.
[]'s
--
Don't be evil - Google 2004
We have a new policy - Google 2012
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On 25/04/2020 22:50, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 22:15:52 +0100, David_B
wrote:

On 25/04/2020 17:53, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0100, David_B
wrote:

[....]
Are you building a new computer for yourself?

Yes, a 24 core Xeon system.* It will run the Rosetta Coronavirus
research program, and when that's done, something else in biology or
physics.

In hindsight, it would have been cheaper to buy a crap version of the
server and upgrade a few parts.* I've had to get some difficult to find
brackets and adapters, like these:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392344221117
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/161787339477
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/372999585133


That's a very noble thing to be doing. THANK YOU.


I was already doing it for fun and to help out astrophysics projects, I
added Rosetta to the mix when the virus appeared.* You can set up Boinc
with as many projects as you wish and alter the priority of each.

It's a pity these projects don't hand out money (to at least cover the
cost of electricity), then I think they'd get 10 times as many people
doing it.* They already have a brilliant system so you can see how much
work you've done, and if you're doing better than others, so it would be
easy to apply a small amount of money to that.

I'll have a study here and see what I could do personally to help:-

https://medium.com/ankr-network/ankr...a-83d36134e248


I believe the program will run on any CPU under Windows, MacOS, or
Linux.* If you have a good graphics card, you should go for Folding at
home instead, as it can use that too.

Even mobile phones running android can run Rosetta.* Not sure what you
can run on Iphones.


I've downloaded BOINC and installed it on my old iMac.

I chose Rosetta@home but I'm not certain what further action I should
take. How can I tell if my machine is being used?
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Default Why does my server's redundant supply only have 12V?

On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 23:33:50 +0100, David_B wrote:

On 25/04/2020 22:50, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 22:15:52 +0100, David_B
wrote:

On 25/04/2020 17:53, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 25 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0100, David_B
wrote:
[....]
Are you building a new computer for yourself?

Yes, a 24 core Xeon system. It will run the Rosetta Coronavirus
research program, and when that's done, something else in biology or
physics.

In hindsight, it would have been cheaper to buy a crap version of the
server and upgrade a few parts. I've had to get some difficult to find
brackets and adapters, like these:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/223642667008
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392344221117
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/161787339477
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/372999585133

That's a very noble thing to be doing. THANK YOU.


I was already doing it for fun and to help out astrophysics projects, I
added Rosetta to the mix when the virus appeared. You can set up Boinc
with as many projects as you wish and alter the priority of each.

It's a pity these projects don't hand out money (to at least cover the
cost of electricity), then I think they'd get 10 times as many people
doing it. They already have a brilliant system so you can see how much
work you've done, and if you're doing better than others, so it would be
easy to apply a small amount of money to that.

I'll have a study here and see what I could do personally to help:-

https://medium.com/ankr-network/ankr...a-83d36134e248


I believe the program will run on any CPU under Windows, MacOS, or
Linux. If you have a good graphics card, you should go for Folding at
home instead, as it can use that too.

Even mobile phones running android can run Rosetta. Not sure what you
can run on Iphones.


I've downloaded BOINC and installed it on my old iMac.

I chose Rosetta@home but I'm not certain what further action I should
take. How can I tell if my machine is being used?


The Boinc interface is a piece of ****. I installed "Boinctasks" (in addition to, not instead of Boinc) which shows everything nicely in full colour and better organized. It also lets you monitor more than one computer on one screen. Not sure if it runs on Macs.

But you should see something like this in the Boinc manager - this is mine in Windows on one of my machines:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/uvd3iyjxjm...oinc2.jpg?dl=0
The status column tells you what's running, the progress column tells you how far through the task it's got, etc.

You can see your position in the world he
https://www.boincstats.com
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