Silent server PSU

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  • #18050
    Anonymous
      Forumite Points: 0

      So at the moment I’m using an AM1 5350 with 8gb of ram as my home server running Ubuntu .

      I may need to up the processing power of this as I’ve just attached a Hauppauge TV card through Plex and it sort of manages but only just.

       

      I’m not sure what I’d want to upgrade it to for better performance but one thing I definitely want to do is quieten down the current PSU which is extremely loud .I’m not sure how advisable it is to open the PSU and volt mod the fan, or if there’s a cheap enough silent PSU?

      #18053
      Dave RiceDave Rice
      Participant
        @ricedg
        Forumite Points: 7

        Technically if it has a fan it will make a “noise” so totally silent isn’t possible unless it has a huge heatsink. However have had some PSUs that are so quiet that for all intents I’d call them silent.

        I recently bought an Aerocool Integrator 500W £35 on Amazon and that was very good in all respects.

        I’ve used loads of Corsair VS 450 £32 and I would put them in the same category but there are some moans in reviews saying the opposite.

        BE QUIET! have a 400W at £40

        #18061
        Anonymous
          Forumite Points: 0

          Thanks Dave, I will take a look at them. As you are here, what would you recommend as a more beefy processor, but without breaking the bank on power usage?

          #18147
          Dave RiceDave Rice
          Participant
            @ricedg
            Forumite Points: 7

            Good question. If you have a look at the CPUs the likes of Synology use for full on media servers like the DS216 Play, then it’s nothing fancy. The DS216 Play uses a 1.5Ghz dual core ARM but with a transcoding engine. It’s predecessor the DS214 Play had a dual core with HTT (4 threads) Intel Atom CE5335 but again that has a transcoding engine.

            There is a Plex article thats says for each single 1080P transcode you need 2000 passmarks. Your 5350 scores 2597 so if it’s struggling we clearly need more. That rules out the SoC Pentium / Celerons so you need to look at the socketed processors.

            The cheapest £30 Celeron G3930 is 3097 so not a huge step up. A £40 G4400 is 3597. I’ve used loads of these in office type PCs and they fly along. For £80 you can get the G4620 which uses HTT to deal with 4 threads. That has a passmark of 5263.

            EDIT Plex TV article says minimum of an i3. What I don’t know is how old that article is as a modern i3-7100 is easily on a par with the previous generation i5.

            Reading further, if you have an active Plex Pass subscription for the Plex Media Server account it can use hardware accelerated transcoding. As the G4400 has Intel Quick Sync Video I personally would be willing to take a punt on it but the G4620 would be the safe choice.

            Problem is with a basic kabylake mobo and 8gB DDR4 that’s going to cost >£200.

            #18247
            Ed PEd P
            Participant
              @edps
              Forumite Points: 39

              “but without breaking the bank on power usage?”

              For roughly equivalent power a new Ryzen 7 setup saves me about 20% in terms of power compared to a five years old i7. If you really want to save leccy take a hard look at your GPU as well.

              #18486
              Anonymous
                Forumite Points: 0

                Thanks Dave will take a look.

                 

                EdP, this will be my always on server, not my desktop PC. So it won’t even have a GPU (unless built in). However, I’m eagerly awaiting Ryzen 2XXX series. Though a part of me is wondering about holding out for the Threadripper 2xxx instead!

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