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blaize.s

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  1. So this really isn't a custom PC at all. I would be lying to say that I "built" a PC. It's more of a customization of an OEM PC. But in the end I think this was more just dumb luck than anything to get a good of a PC as I did for the price... But first the specs: HP Z240 chasis and motherboard Intel i7 7700K 32GB DIMM DDR4 (16 x 2) clocked @ 2400 MHz Samsung PM961 NVMe PCIe M.2 512GB Boot Drive Seagate ST4000LM024-2AN17V 4TB Data drive NVIDIA RTX 2060 6GB I initially found the PC I bought on a Tiger Direct for $194 dollars. It was listed as a PC with the CPU, RAM, and a 500GB HDD in it. Even at the listed specs, it was a an excellent deal. I honestly think it was priced wrong, but I bought it anyways. When it came, it was exactly what was on the ad, except it did have the SSD in it that was not listed on the ad, but it was set up as the data drive, not the boot drive. It also came with a Quadro P2000 in it. It's a nice card no doubt, but it's not for gaming. It's not going to compare to an RTX card. So I pulled the card and sold it and I got enough to buy a new RTX 2060. With a $7 pigtail to adapt PCIe 1.0 to PCIe 2.0 power, I was able to get the RTX 2060 to work with stock the PSU without having to get another one of those. And I reinstalled the OS on the SSD for the boot drive. I also added in the 4TB HDD over the 500GB HDD because I already owned it. When I'm not using it, I let Folding@Home run on it, and it cranks out a lot of work with those specs. I'm glad that I'm able to use it for a good cause too. It's nothing really nice to look at...just a boring HP Z240 Tower. It isn't sexy, but it for the price, I can't complain. In the end, I spent less than $200 bucks on this thing and got a machine that can play most modern titles at moderate settings or even high settings depending on the game. Here's the UserBenchmark page for my profile of this machine. https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/29006059
  2. So far, so good. I wiped it and installed Windows again. Flawless in executions on everything I've done with it. I put a bunch of VMs it to test it under what I want to use it for.
  3. I'm not joking about the price. That's literally what I paid for it.
  4. So I was browsing Tiger Direct and found an HP Z240 with a 7700k, Quadro P2000 GPU, 32GB of RAM, 500 GB SSD (not on the ad) and 500 GB HDD for $194. Naturally, I bought it. It seemed to good to be true, but sure enough it was when I got it a few days later. This system sells for >$600 on eBay. http://m.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=7247499 But just wanting to make sure. Is this fool's gold? Any experience with these?
  5. One of the perks I have with work is that I select my own hardware. I wanted to build a desktop, but decided to go with a customized laptop. In any case, it was easy and fun to do...
  6. Because I can? I dunno. Truthfully though, I do a lot of virtualization for various projects that I work on, and this was a cheap solution to something that would have otherwise been more costly. Like I said in the OP, I was going to build something more conventionally, but I re-purposed some parts I had laying around to build this out with some other used parts from eBay. I do run a few VM's on it NextCloud and Plex -- both which require significant storage, a Firewall for my LAN, a private Git server, print server, etc.
  7. I recently got the itch to build a new machine – not for gaming, rather for virtualization. I have a gaming rig already: an ASUS ROG GL551 (i7 6700HQ, 32GB RAM, and 2x SSD) that runs all the titles I like to play. My goal was to build a hypervisor for ESXi that wouldn’t break the bank. I was aiming for a system that had a hyperthreaded quad-core, 32 GB of RAM, and two storage drives with decent capacity, and multiple NIC’s. My first hunch was to go out on eBay and buy an old workstation or server and use that. I found an old server that might have done the trick: a HP ProLiant DL380 G6 and even ordered it. But the server arrived without some of the advertised components, so that guy went back. After sending the server back, I began to ponder, would it be possible to build one out of a laptop and supplement it with some new or used parts? I sold off my last desktop years ago and have been using only laptops for some time now, so I have a bin with laptop parts. I made an inventory of what I did have on hand that might be useful. HP EliteBook 8570w Chassis HP EliteBook 8570w Motherboard with 2 Memory Slots NVIDIA Quadro K2000M Intel i7 3630QM 16GB (2x8) PC3-12800 DDR3 RAM 2TB 5400RPM 2.5” HDD 3TB 7200RPM 3.5” HDD 128GB M.2 SSD 2x USB3 1GB Ethernet Adapters 1 USB/eSATA Drive Enclosure After some digging, I learned that the i7 3630QM could support up to a maximum of 32GB of RAM. I also learned that HP did make a trim of the 8570w that could support 32GB of RAM so long as the CPU supported it and the motherboard had 4 RAM slots. The first order of business was to verify if ESXi would even install on an 8570w. ESXi is not designed to run on laptops or even most consumer grade components -- but that doesn’t mean that it won’t run, only that it’s not supported. In any case, I pieced together a system with the parts and sure enough, ESXi installed without a hitch and I was able to create a couple of VM’s without any problems. Next, I found a used motherboard with 4 RAM slots on eBay for $45 and bought it. Unfortunately, it was broken when I got it, so again, that went back to the seller. I found another one for about $50 and bought it, and it was in prime condition. While I was at it, I bought 2 more 8GB SODIMMS too. I installed the motherboard with the 4 RAM slots and 32 GB of RAM and it worked perfectly. With this now installed, I needed storage. I already had a couple of HDD’s that would do the trick, but I need 1 more to get me up to the storage threshold I wanted. I bought a 4TB internal drive and an optical drive to HDD caddy and installed the 2TB HDD, 4TB HDD, and 128GB M.2 SSD inside the box. So now I had a laptop with an i7 Quad Core, 32GB of RAM, NVIDIA Quadro K2000M, and 3 internal drives for a total of 6.1TB of storage… not too shabby by any estimation. ? With the base system built, I added some external devices to round it out. The next thing I did was buy an eSATA cable to go with my drive enclosure and I installed my 3TB HDD in the enclosure and plugged it in to the machines eSATA port, bringing the total storage to 9.1TB. Using the eSATA port freed up the USB3 ports so I could use the USB NIC’s that I had. Combined with the onboard 1GBs port, the machine now had 3x 1GBs ports and was ready to rock. After installing ESXi 6.7 on the box, I was able to add drivers for the USB NIC’s because ESXi doesn’t out of the box support these, thanks to VirtualGhetto. Now I had what I started out to build: a machine that I could use for virtualization. So the final build looks like this: HP EliteBook 8570w Chassis HP EliteBook 8570w Motherboard with 4 Memory Slots Intel i7 3630QM NVIDIA Quadro K2000M 32GB (4x8) PC3-12800 DDR3 RAM 2TB 5400RPM 2.5” HDD 3TB 7200RPM 3.5” HDD (eSATA) 4TB 7200RPM 2.5” HDD 128GB M.2 SSD 3x 1GBs Ethernet ports
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