Finally yesterday all required parts has been delivered to me and I was able to put all of them together. It's been a long time since I last build my own custom PC, so I have to say it was quite exciting. Not only because I did all work myself and there was no expert saying "yes, this is gonna work together", but I've chosen quite a large cpu cooler and I wasn't sure whether it'll fit into the case. Also, good old times when you were in trouble with your PC you could always get it to your neighbor and swap some parts to identify and shoot troublemaker quickly. Who still have PC at home this days? Especially featuring xeon CPU?
Case arrived first. Unpacked and unwrapped looks really good. And it's pretty wide. Place for 8 HDDs is lot more than I need today. There are silencing pads on top/side walls so it should be quiet and comfortable for environment. There are air filters at every inlet so it should keep my baby clean for the long time.
Not really much to say about PSU except is offers modular cabling (yeah! No more spare cables inside!) and its Bronze 80, supports 550W of energy and all required safety measures.
Ok, time for mainboard. This is gonna be one of most important pieces here. Looks pretty small given the features offered. One huge CPU socket, 8 dimms, plenty of hdds connectors. Two Intel GE NICs supported by VMware w/PXE, one additional OOB mgmt gigabit network card (which I am extremely curious of).
There is nothing more to say about CPU. Let's have a picture for the record and move forward.
Okay, things secured, now it's time to attach out cooling unit. This is gonna be the mose difficult part of the operation. Let's have a look. This is monster-class cooling.
Applying thermal paste was always something that I've never liked. You just put something ugly on your brand-new shiny CPU. But I'd rather have it dirty and cool, then shiny burned.
Installing cooler was kind of pain, but ultimately I've managed it. Now it looks quite good. Only thing left is to install memory put everything into case itself and connect cables. Easier said then done! It turned out that my main PSU 24-pin cable is just as long as needed, which made connecting it little bit hard.
Then I just realized that I don't have screen & keyboard. Even if we have external dedicated mgmt interface or serial console, it has to be configured for the first time! So I just made a call to my neighbor and it was lucky shoot - he told me that he have one and he can give it to me for a couple of days. Perfect! Now we are really ready to go. Everything ready & connected, I decided to record this.
Oh, by the way, sorry for quality of pictures & video. Looks like my phone isn't such a great camera as sales guys promised. Yeah, crapy world. But to the point.
You got it. Didn't work out. Will troubleshoot "b6" tomorrow. Good Night!