nukhem Posted July 23, 2016 Share Posted July 23, 2016 While surfing on an obscure german lowpower-computing forum i found what i believe might be a great unraid board. gerade gefunden das Fuji Board sieht auch gut aus Leerlauf (mit C-States) Asus Z170-A ----------------------23 (20) Watt Gigabyte GA-Z170X-UD3 --------17 (17) Watt Asrock Z170M Pro4S -------------15 (15) Watt MSI Z170A PC Mate --------------24 (13) Watt Asrock H170M Pro4 --------------18 (18) Watt Asus B150M-C D3 ----------------23 (16) Watt Fujitsu D3402-B -----------------9,7 (9,7) Watt System: Enermax Triathlor ETL300AWT, Core i5-6600K, 2 x 4 GByte RAM, SSD, USB-Tastatur/Maus, HDMI-Display Full HD Quelle: c’t 2015, Heft 22 I'm talking about that Fujitsu board. 9,7watt idle power usage, seems like amazing compared to the other ones. I looked it up and it seems to be an industrial skylake board designed to be low power friendly. 5x Sata ports (could be better but still) 1x M2 slot for cache drive 1x 16x Pci-express 1x 4x Pci-express 2x 1x Pci-express 1x internal USB port (great!) Have i mentioned only 9,7Watt idle usage with i5-6600k?! Price : 120€ PDF datasheet: https://sp.ts.fujitsu.com/dmsp/Publications/public/DS-D3402-B.pdf Motherboard layout picture: New energy-efficient extended lifecycle boards from Fujitsu News Published: 14 March 2016 - 19:34 - Amy Wallington For semi-industrial use, Fujitsu provides the new mainboards D3402-B and D3417-B of the extended lifecycle series. They support the new, sixth generation Intel Core processors and allow the use of DDR4 memory, that is characterised by a significant increase in performance. Both models are available at distributor Rutronik. The 100er series of Intel chipsets enables the use of more powerful CPUs with a simultaneous reduction of power consumption. The boards D3402-B and D3417-B are designed for continuous use on a 24/7-operation and suitable for an ambient temperature of up to +50 degrees Celsius. The design is consistently created for stability and power efficiency as the boards are characterised by a smaller, but high quality components mounting density. Thereby, the power consumption is lowered, the installed components are less exposed to thermal stress and the life cycle is extended. Both mainboards support three digital video outputs, with two display ports of the version 1.2 allowing a 4K resolution at 60Hz. Another feature is the provision of a M.2 port, making it possible to omit a 2,5’-slot and the additional wiring for power supply and data lines. The D3402-B with the Intel Q170 chipset provides enhanced manageability with Intel Active Management (iAMT) and vPro. It supports up to 64GB memory and has a multi-level watchdog function. The D3417-B with the Intel C236 chipset allows the use of powerful XEON CPUs, which furthermore allow ECC (error correction code). Due to the increased number of SATA ports and XEON support, the Fujitsu D3417-B can be considered as an alternative to workstations or entry-level server. Both models belong to the same layout family and have an extended assured availability of three years. As the boards are part of the extended lifecycle series, customers benefit from a strict lifecycle and revision management. The product safety is ensured by the CSA certification according to the standard 60 950. Thanks to this and the 24/7-operation, the continuous use, for example in high-availability application scenarios like emergency rooms and surgical areas, is allowed. Through its integration and expansion capabilities, for example by frame grabber or video cards, the models are suitable for imaging and visualisation, necessary for 3D representations of data from different imaging methods such as CT, MIR and X-ray. Quote Link to comment
cookiemole Posted August 6, 2016 Share Posted August 6, 2016 Looks awesome, but do they sell it in the US? Quote Link to comment
HellDiverUK Posted August 6, 2016 Share Posted August 6, 2016 Looks pretty similar to the Haswell board in my Fujitsu server (TX1310M1). It idles at 8W with an E3-1226v3 and two 8GB ECC DIMMs. Fujitsu boards are available in Europe, but they are difficult to get. Even here in the UK there's maybe only one or two companies that sell them, and even then availability is low. Quote Link to comment
chorche Posted January 25, 2017 Share Posted January 25, 2017 I order this mobo from eBay, put i3-6100T, 8GB DDR4 stick and SSD in - idling around 20W which is really good but not good as mentioned in first post. Do I missing something? Wrong PSU (OEM 245W Dell)? Quote Link to comment
nukhem Posted January 25, 2017 Author Share Posted January 25, 2017 http://www.enermax.de/power-supplies/triathlor-bulk/ This is the PSU used in the test. Have you checked the C-states in the bios? Quote Link to comment
chorche Posted January 25, 2017 Share Posted January 25, 2017 C-states is set to Auto by default. Changing the value to C7/C7s - no change, still idling around 20W at Windows 10 (on unRaid is about 5-7W more). I give a try to Seasonic SSP- 350 GT (80 Plus Gold PSU - better spec than Enermax used in test) instead of OEM Dell PSU and I`ll post results. I`m still happy with this results, previous urRaid server based on Xeon L5630 pulls around 100W. Quote Link to comment
nukhem Posted January 26, 2017 Author Share Posted January 26, 2017 More info https://www.hardwareluxx.de/community/f101/nas-auf-pentium-g4400-basis-1093362.html Quote Link to comment
chorche Posted February 2, 2017 Share Posted February 2, 2017 Thanks nukhem... I alrady do a research with two different PSU and YES, it really depend on PSU. System spec: i3-6100T, 8GB DDR4 single stick, GIGABYTE GeForce GTX 1050 Ti D5 4G, Samsung 950Pro m.2 NVMe 256GB SSD OS: Windows 10 Pro, idle Dell 245W OEM - 20W IGD - 25W GTX Seasonic 360W 80+ Gold - 15W IGD - 20W with GTX Notebook type 120W external PSU with power distribution board from Chenbro ES34069 (similiar to picoPSU) - 11W IGD, 16W GTX Unraid generally pull a few watts more. Even under full load (3DMark benchmark), whole system didnt exceed 100W - thats really impressive, my previous PC (i7-3820) pulls 100W on idle. Quote Link to comment
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