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Midorica

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  1. Agree
    Midorica reacted to PCGuy_5960 in GTX 1080 Ti with i7 930   
    The 5820K is cheaper and it overclocks better. The 6800K is just not worth it right now...
  2. Like
    Midorica reacted to KTFO|SGTmoody in Would like some help for my storage router   
    Hi.
    I'm going to start with its purpose. You may allready know but you may not...
    This is a scsi to fibre chanel router and is designed primarily for backups over the Internet or a lan. HP and other manufacturers provide scsi pice cards for connecting storage servers togeather as it's a better and faster way of transfuring large amounts of data fast.
    This just converts that scsi storage protocol and media in to a routerable connection
    OK. So to use it. You will need another pc and a scsi pcie card along with the correct scsi cable which I think is a scsi HD68 cable
    You then need to out the fibre chanel NIC in your pc and connect the router and pc togeather using a OM1 or above lc to lc multimode fibre cable
    Remember to get the RX and TX facing the correct way. RX = receive port TX = transmit port
    So you plug the TX in one side so that the other end will plug in to the RX
    Next thing to do is connect your pc to the router using its RJ45 management port (right hand side of bottom picture)
    You will have to figure out how to reset it if you can't log in. Best to download the odd manual for the device and follow the first setup procedure as this will tell you its default ip and subnet so you can connect to it. One connected you will have to use its Web management to configure the router.
    I wont explain this here as I can't look it up right now but if you have managed to get hold of the manual it should tell you what to do.
    If you haven't already got the scsi card you will need to find one that's compatible with a computer and will allow you to use your hard drives. You probably won't be connecting the hard drives directly to the pcie card so it's likely to see it on the motherboard or a supported raid card.
    At this point I want to emphasise the word supported as these technologies are designed for very specific environments and devices so they would never have been built with the average joe's desktop in mind. They are built or $10,000 storage servers and the networks to support it. (price when this wasn't outdated) so you need to choose your pcie cards carefully.
    For example my 4GB Fibre chanel cards are not supported on my crosshair V motherboard but they work in all my enterprise servers.
    This is what a scsi pcie card is if your not sure (I'm not recommending it, it's just an example)http://www.adaptec.com/en-us/products/scsi/asc-29320lpe/
    Any questions let us know
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