Dell PowerEdge R510 review
in Servers
Verdict
A compact 2U storage server with plenty of expansion potential, good remote management and more capacity options in the pipeline
Review Date: 23 Dec 2009
Reviewed By: Dave Mitchell
Price when reviewed: £3,173 (£3,649 inc VAT)
Features & Design
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Value for Money
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Performance
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Dell's UEFI (unified extensible firmware interface) is provided as standard, but without the iDRAC 6 cards and their NVRAM you won't have a driver repository. So when you use the UEFI to install an OS on a base system, you'll need a USB stick inserted in one of the two internal ports for extra storage.
The server also comes with Dell's new Management Console software, although for small sites this Altiris-based product is too heavyweight. Note also that the Altiris Notification Server at its foundation won't support Server 2008 as a host platform until later this year.
The server has a riser card with four PCI Express slots. The front one is set aside for the RAID card and the three rear slots accept full-height, half-length cards. Virtualisation isn't an area of interest, as the R510 supports only 64GB of memory and doesn't have the internal SD memory card slot offered by the R610 and R710 models.
Read PC Pro's enterprise reviews
PC Pro's Enterprise section has all the latest business news, reviews and analysis.Internally, everything looks neat and tidy, with the two processor sockets staggered down the motherboard for improved cooling and each partnered by six DIMM sockets. These are covered by a large plastic air shroud, and cooling is handled by a row of five cold-swap fans, which generated very low noise levels.
You have two choices for power. The review system was fitted with a single 1,100W hot-plug supply, which can be augmented with a second. With the four-drive model you can cut costs and go for a single 480W cold-swap supply.
The R510 on review was equipped with a pair of 2.26GHz L5520 Xeons offering a low TDP of 60W, which delivered good results in our power consumption tests. With the server in standby our inline meter recorded 11W, and with Server 2008 running in idle this rose to 115W.
The R510 has a lot of features and is a good choice for businesses requiring a high local-storage capacity in their rack. Strong competition comes from HP's ProLiant DL380 G6, but the R510 is more compact and the forthcoming model with more drive bays will match it closely for capacity.
SMBs with a hunger for storage, a tight budget and limited rack space will find the new PowerEdge R510 could be what they've been looking for. It doesn't compromise on features and the planned future models will have an even higher storage potential.
Author: Dave Mitchell
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