Product ReviewsNetworks/Servers
Stepping up from the 1950 brings us to the 2950 and a big improvement in storage prospects. The 2U chassis offers a lot more room than its low-profile partner, and Dell has put this extra real-estate to good use. The front panel offers a good range of storage options. The review unit included a four-disk cage, with three occupied by 3.5in Seagate SAS drives. As they have identical interfaces, you can substitute these for lower-cost and higher-capacity SATA drives. A six-drive cage for 3.5in drives is also on offer, or you can go for an eight-bay cage and 2.5in SAS drives. The only oddity is the pair of embedded SATA interfaces on the motherboard - the 1950 has one as well and they appear to serve no useful purpose. Storage fault tolerance is comprehensive,
Expansion options are good too, as the horizontal riser card next to the power supply bay offers a pair of PCI Express 8x slots. A second, smaller riser card on the opposite side provides a PCI Express 4x slot, and you can mix and match them with PCI-X versions. As with the 1950, both riser cards can be released and replaced in seconds. For a rack server, the 2950 runs comparatively quietly, and there's good reason for this, as the processors are fitted with large passive heatsinks. In front is a bank of four 60mm-diameter fan modules and each one is hot-swappable. The eight memory sockets are in exactly the same location as with the 1950 and these, along with the processor, are covered in a large solid shroud that can be released and swung back for easy access. By Dave Mitchell SPECIFICATIONS:
3GHz Xeon 5050 8GB 533MHz PC2-4200F FBDIMMs 3 x 36GB 15K.4 SAS hard disks PERC 5/i RAID card dual Gigabit with TOE IPMI 2 BMC DRAC 5/i remote management 2 x 750W hot-swap power supplies
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