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Hardware

Rack Mounted PCs for the Home User? 442

andrewa writes "Do any folks out there have recommendations on available gear for building a small, but extendable, rack-mounted system? As a developer of software for use in contact centers I want to put together a small development system that consists of at least three PCs to create a simulated environment to test my applications in. Why rack mounted? Well, I want to save space and only have the bare minimum systems (no need for multiple CD-ROMS, monitors, no sound-cards, just lots of memory and HD space). I also will add to this in the future, so don't want to limit myself to just a few pcs on the system. I've scouted around a bit, but didn't see too much. I'm in the UK at the moment, but will be moving to the U.S. in about 6 months, so power requirements (although I guess most equipment has switchable voltages) is a consideration."
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Rack Mounted PCs for the Home User?

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  • Rack Mount!? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Not The Real Me ( 538784 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:55PM (#8834179)
    Ha!!!
    Get a bookcase, flip the tower computers on the side.

    Rack mounted indeed!

    • Re:Rack Mount!? (Score:5, Informative)

      by lawrencekhoo ( 108310 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @12:44AM (#8835508) Homepage
      I recently had to set up a mini-cluster for my department. We looked into rack mounts, but finally decided to go with micro-ATX PCs housed in a standard bookshelf. The main reason for our decision was that 1U servers are very expensive, hot, and noisy. 2U cases are better, and you can use off-the-shelf components, but 2U offers no space savings over micro-ATX.

      We found micro-ATX motherboards with dual DDR and gigabit ethernet built-in. Micro-ATX cases are cheap, and you can get solid 300 watt power supplies for them. Additionally, we can if needed fit in 3 standard PCI cards.

      So, we decided to get 15 micro-ATX PCs, and house them in 3 shelves of a standard 2 1/2' (w) x 6 1/2' (h) bookshelf. The PCs sit backwards so all the ports face out. There's still space for another 10 PC's in the bookshelf. Compare this with only 20 2U cases in a standard rack.

      My recommendation, go with micro-ATX PCs, unless you really need an ATX sized motherboard. It'll be easier to deal with and will save you a bunch of money over rack mounts.
  • No thanks (Score:3, Interesting)

    by rixstep ( 611236 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:56PM (#8834187) Homepage
    Rack mounted PCs? No thanks.

    But an Xgrid cluster something like VA Tech's in my closet I can hook up to the laptops would be nice.

    If I sell this scratchy iPod mini I should have enough loose change...
  • by kaosmunkee ( 198798 ) * on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:56PM (#8834190)
    You can buy 19" rack equipment that was designed for musicians... Something like this [harmony-central.com] might work, if you cooled it properly. 6U of space will hold 6 1U servers. And they're made to be shipped around, so when you move you won't have to do too much to pack them up.
    • by mabinogi ( 74033 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:00PM (#8834224) Homepage
      I think you'd probably be better off looking for stuff designed for PCs.

      The moment anything is associated with professional audio, it gets a 500% markup.
      Especially if they're designed for gigging, computer racks don't need to be anywhere near as robust.
      • Anything that relates to racks - rack cases, racks themselves - gets a 500% markup.
      • My SKBs are about 14" deep. my computers are deeper. While the 21band EQ and compressor/limiter are great to have in it (you do all have those in your stereo systems, right?), they'd suck even if they were deep enough for computers. My old amplifier cases had fans and occasionally got a bag of dry ice.

        However, building a "road case" is neither hard nor expensive. making it roadable would want some experience with working with (say) anvil cases a bit for back panels, fasteners, etc.

        And yeah, my SKBs

      • Um dont think so...

        I can get a 8U flight Cae from musicians friend for $79.00US while the same Travel PC rack costs $500.00

        professional audio is dirt cheap as there are far more of them than Computer people.
      • by jtara ( 133429 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @01:15AM (#8835630)

        It really isn't true that anything associated with audio gets an automatic 500% markup.

        I recently built a new workstation, and decided to built it in a rackmount case this time. I though it would neaten things up a lot to get my (rackmount) UPS and extra battery, server, switch, and all those pesky little boxes (firewall, cable and DSL modems, etc.) into an enclosed rackmount case. (That way, most of the cable runs are inside of the case...)

        After looking at surplus racks and not finding anything that I would have in my home (my office is in my dining room) I decided to splurge and buy a brand-new rack cabinet.

        I wound-up with a Middle Atlantic Products [middleatlantic.com] WRK-24MDK [middleatlantic.com] "presentation enclosure system" which is a 30" deep 24U enclosed cabinet.

        At about $800, it was less than similar products designed for the server market. (Which, IMO, has by far the highest markups!)

        There are somewhat more affordable choices available from Middle Atlantic, if is doesn't have to be quite so pretty. Particularly if you want a full-size cabinet. They also make some pretty nifty cabinets intended for in-wall roll-out installations [middleatlantic.com], which are popular in home theatre applications.

        One thing you have to watch-out for with audio racks is depth. Most audio equipment is not very deep, and most enclosed racks for the audio market are not going to be deep enough for most servers.

        The cheapest way to go, if you are handy, or having custom furniture built anyway, is to just buy rackrails [middleatlantic.com] for a few dollars and build them into something.

        The next-cheapest is to use an open rack rather than an enclosed rack. These are commonly used in corporate server rooms where individual-cabinet security is not needed. Severs typically sit on center-mounted shelves rather than actually being mounted from the ears.

        And, yes, you can pretty easily find full-size and smaller racks on the surplus market (I found several locally) but they can be rough.

        Keep in mind that 1U servers are VERY noisy! (The smaller the fan diameter, the more the noise, for the same volume of air moved.) This is a consideration if this is in your home or even in your office if it is in a work area. If you are a build-it-yourself type, get 4U enclosures and add your own motherboard.

        I used a Chenbro [chenbro.com.tw] RM412 [chenbro.com.tw] case, which comes with a hot-swap SCSI backplane, and takes extended ATX mother boards.

        I added a 4U shelf for all of the little boxes, and got a new low-cost rack-mount gigabit switch. (An SMC 8508T [smc.com])

    • by AltImage ( 626465 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:04PM (#8834252) Homepage
      Musician's racks won't work. They're both 19 inch racks but rack comuters are much deeper than musical equipment. Computers are about 20"-24" deep. Music hardware is about half that and the racks reflect that.
      • You're thinking of an effects rack. There are pro audio rack cases that are plenty deep enough.

        I have a JBL rackmount amplifier sitting in my living room right now and it's over 22" deep.

        Most pro audio rack case manufacturers make cases that are deep enough to accommodate most rack mount PC systems.

      • 24" is the standard depth of 4 post racks. Actually, likely something like 23 3/4" or 24 1/4" because 24" would be too easy. 24" on center? Outside posts? Inside posts? Beh. I know the 4' 4 post cabinet sitting next to me is out of alignment.
    • Audio AV gear is usually not deep enough to house 1U servers, so I don't advise it.
  • by onyxruby ( 118189 ) * <onyxruby&comcast,net> on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:56PM (#8834191)
    Couple of thoughts here on this as I've done what your looking to do. First suggestion is wait to buy your stuff until you get here in the US to save yourself shipping fees and possible import duties. Once your here and settled look on ebay for a local auction so that you don't have to have the rack shared.

    Going back to school to pick up Cisco and SUN I wanted a rack to hold all the requisite lab equipment for my sandbox - and I thought it would be nifty. I did this last summer and I was able to buy a 42u rack for $100 by watching a week for a local rack on ebay and avoided $200 in shipping fees. Of course no data center I have ever seen was willing to personalize their their rack by painting it metallic green like I did:)

    When your buying your rack mount systems bear in mind that 1u cases tend to cost a lot more and have lower capacity. If you have the room, and at home you should, buy either a 3u or 4u rack case and then you don't have to use low profile memory, cards, power supplies and the like that are a fair bit more expensive than standard issue fair.

    You can easily get the 3u or 4u cases on ebay for the same price range as a normal computer case. However the rack mount keyboards, mice and monitors cost a pretty penny. If you buy a full rack it will be far cheaper to just by a couple rackmount shelfs and put an old 15" Monitor, KVM, Keyboard and still have plenty of room left over.

    Also bear in mind your electric capacity with where you place it. In my experience you'll get around 6-8 systems for a LAN party on your standard 15 amp outlet before blowing the circuit. If you can put it on a circuit that is as isolated as you can make it.
    • Listen to this guy.

      Go with 4U rack mount cases. They are cheap, and easy. They will fit all your standard hardware out there.

      For the rack itself, they can be expensive new, but you can get them used often enough. Look on ebay and find one in your vicinity. My friend got a nice compaq 42U rack for cheap that way.

      If you can't wait, you could do as one has suggested and use a 19" audio rack. Just make sure it's deep enough; some audio racks aren't deep enough to fit some computer cases.

      If you're o
    • by Odin's Raven ( 145278 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @02:24AM (#8835881)
      Painted mine black, but whatever floats your boat... :-)

      Good points all around in parent post. Additional thoughts from my own experience:

      As others have pointed out, another problem with 1U/2U rack cases is the noise. They typically use 40mm/50mm case fans, and the sound of those poor little guys whirring their hearts out is like living in an airport. While you might be able to tolerate this with a single computer, once you stack up 3/4/5 machines, the noise levels can become remarkably unpleasant. After 3 months of insomnia, I chucked those cases in the closet and replanted everything in 4U cases. (I've since seen low-noise 40mm Pabst fans popping up every now and then -- the airflow is much lower than the turboprop-wannabe stock fans, but I'm tempted to pick up a few of these, bring the 1U case out of storage, and give it another shot -- for a minimal single-CPU/single-drive system, the reduced airflow should still be sufficient.)

      4U cases, OTOH, are much easier to quiet down. These typically use 80mm or 90mm case fans, and many have mount points for a couple of 60mm fans on the back. There's a variety of low-noise 80/90mm fans on the market. Not quite as wide a selection in the 60mm range, but they're not particularly difficult to find if you need the extra airflow. (FWIW, I've been happy with the Vantec Stealth line.)

      The parent poster's comment about 4Us taking standard power supplies is good to keep in mind. The PS in a 1U/2U case is going to be a nonstandard size -- which can be a killer if it dies on you. With the standard-sized ATX PS used in a 4U case, if you lose a PS you can pop down to your local computer supply store, buy a replacement, and be back up and running in no time.

      If you're running Linux, you can manage without a KVM once your machines are set up and running properly, since you can always forward X sessons from multiple boxes over to whichever machine your monitor is connected to. That being said, a KVM is awfully handy if you need control over a machine during the early boot stages -- you can't get to the BIOS settings display using X forwarding. :-)

      Personal preference I've developed regarding rails is to use the 26" rails even though most 4U cases are only 20" deep. The longer rails make it more awkward when you first put the case in the rack (since they stick out past the ends of the case), but afterwards they'll let you slide the case out far enough that you can get to the connectors on the back. (Like flipping off the switch on the power supply or unplugging the cord while you're working inside the machine.) I find that being able to do all the work from the front of the rack is more convenient than having to hop back and forth between the front and rear to yank things off and plug things back in again. If you rarely work inside your case, it's not a big deal -- save a few bucks and go for shorter rails, or even skip the rails completely and bolt the case directly to the rack.

      You mentioned lots of HD space. If you're planning something serious, like a 4+ drive RAID configuration, pay close attention to mountpoints and airflow. Many entry-model 4U cases only have 2 mount points for hard drives. You can pick up 3.5-5.25" adapter brackets that'll let you mount additional drives in the 5.25" external bays -- there's usually 3 external bays on an entry-level 4U case. If you pick up one of the inserts that fit into the 3 external bay area and allow you to mount 5 hard drives sidways, be very *very* cautious if you're using 7200 RPM drives. Those drives run hot normally, and there's almost no space between the drives in these inserts, hence little room for airflow. You'll want a dedicated cooling fan, preferably built into the rear of the insert, or you're going to run a real risk of the drives quickly overheating and dying. (Been there, fried that, bought new drives.)

      Oh yes, and something that drove me crazy for a while -- if you pick up a second-hand rack and the mou

  • Consider Emulation (Score:5, Informative)

    by poppycock ( 231161 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:58PM (#8834203)
    I have good luck with a mixture of Virtual PC for Macs and VMWare for Linux. VPC doesn't run on the G5s yet, though.

    Maybe a virtual solution will work for you?
    • by Total_Wimp ( 564548 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:37PM (#8834475)
      I have good luck with a mixture of Virtual PC for Macs and VMWare for Linux.

      These are great, but having multiple systems comes in handy. It's always nice to know that that thing you're going to blow up will only affect one machine and your really important stuff is gonna keep hummin' along on the side.

      For the stuff I really don't know enough about yet, I like to have a seperate box to play.

      TW
      • by Unregistered ( 584479 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:07PM (#8834659)
        VPC and VMWare create system images, so anything you do in the virtual system will only affect that system and it's disk image (a file on teh real system). No more dangerous. They are not emulators at all, you create a system image, install an os on it, hook it up to the network and it's just like a different computer. Except cheaper. Much cheaper. And i think you can have multiple systems open at once.
        • That you can, and with VMWare 4.5 (just released), you can task more than 1GB of RAM to the virtual machines. If you have an average SMP or a very fast single-CPU system with boatloads of RAM and some good, fast disks (a RAID-1/0 array works wonders for this), you can have a very nice virtual network running with many systems active. I've run a network of about six virtual systems before on one box; one day, I'll see how many I can run with the new RAM availablity.
    • by rimu guy ( 665008 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @04:00AM (#8836115) Homepage

      Instead of VMWare consider User Mode Linux [sf.net]. It is free. And it permits you to run many virtual servers per host server. e.g. you should be able to run 16-30 virtual servers per 3Ghz Intel proc. Just make sure you have enough memory (4GB is handy).

      With Copy on Write file systems you can prep up your testing environment. Snapshot it. Run your tests. Then nuke the resulting file systems and start again. Being able to start a test run with the whole file system in the state it was in when you started (without having to roll back individual files and databases) is very convenient.

      - UML-based VPS Hosting [rimuhosting.com]

  • by morcheeba ( 260908 ) * on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:59PM (#8834211) Journal
    Apple has a Xserve mincluster [apple.com] that has done some things right - small size, acousticly shielded, and on wheels. I must stress the acoustic part if you'e going to work next to this machine - My dual athlon with raid's drone got irritating very quickly.
    • by mroch ( 715318 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:03PM (#8834250)
      http://www.apple.com/xserve/cluster/wgcluster.html "The Apple Workgroup Cluster for Bioinformatics provides a faster, easier and lower-cost path to scientific discovery. You'll get rapid access to data analysis with minimal administrative burden in one comprehensive, industry-leading solution. All starting at $27,999." I wish......
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Something tells me this guy isn't looking to spend $28,000. I can't believe you got modded up for such stupidity. +5 Pro-Apple.
      • by Smurf ( 7981 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:41PM (#8834878)
        I can't believe you got modded up for such stupidity.

        If you read his post carefully you will notice that he didn't say "buy an Xserve mini cluster". He said "follow Apple's example", and then he showed several things that Apple did right with their Workgroup Cluster.

        Many of those things can be achieved by using cheaper hardware and not getting all the goodies that you don't need (e.g., the truckload of software), so you can follow Apple's example without spending $28,000.

  • by joshtimmons ( 241649 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:59PM (#8834214) Homepage
    You didn't say much about your application, but you might want to look at using vmware [vmware.com] instead of a stack of hardware. I've been using it since 1.0 and it has completely quenched my need to buy and maintain a suite of servers for testing my distributed apps.
  • Gank it from work (Score:5, Informative)

    by DeathPenguin ( 449875 ) * on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:59PM (#8834215)
    I take it the person who asked the question wants to run on server boards, which basically excludes any of the cute little shoebox cases available. They can also be rather large, which excludes many desktop mid-tower cases as well. Most 1U cases I've seen are intended strictly for datacenter use and aren't built with acoustical ergonomics in mind--They usually run several 40mm 7000RPM fans and generate a lot of noise.

    I usually just go to Antec [antec-inc.com] for enclosures, but in this case it might just be wiser to have your boss order a few extra nodes that you can take home. Modern Xeon and Opteron systems tend to get very, very hot in 1U enclosures and require wind tunneling for more efficient cooling and require enormous amounts of power from PSUs that cost several hundred dollars in 1U form factor.
  • Rack Mounted Servers (Score:5, Informative)

    by FiberOpPraise ( 607416 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @08:59PM (#8834216) Homepage
    I currently work with servers, specifically rackmounted servers. I can tell you that for home use they are not worth the effort. For one thing heat is a big issue. Its no longer trivial to add some case fans to the back and let the air flow freely. You also can not use standard heatsinks because they will not fit in a 1U case.

    The main and possibly only benefit of the rackmounted server is because it saves space. This is essential when putting servers in a datacenter as they charge you for how much space you use.

    If you are not going to put the servers into a datacenter just put the computer in a standard case which is about (4U) and save yourself the $300-$600 that a rackmount case will set you back alone.
  • by lesinator ( 459276 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:00PM (#8834217)
    Middle Atlantic Products [middleatlantic.com] makes some nice, inexpensive rack hardware in their musician's section that's suitable for a home rack. I have one of their 36" racks and its served me well. In it I have racked a few homebrew PC's, mostly with rack-mount cases purchased from NewEgg [newegg.com]. Decent rack-mount cases, not overly priced, and many will take standard sized motherboards and power supplies.
  • by digitalgimpus ( 468277 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:01PM (#8834234) Homepage
    HP's got some really cheap (sub $2000) rackmountable hardware available, with decent specs. They are intel based, so could run Linux, Solaris x86, or if you must W2k, W2k3.

    Checkout the Proliant's:
    http://h18004.www1.hp.com/products/se rvers/prolian tdl140/index.html

    That's not to bad for the hardware.
  • Mini-ATX (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mroch ( 715318 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:01PM (#8834236)
    I agree that having your own rack would be cool, and I would build one if I had the money, but I can't help but wonder what the benefit is over some mini-ATX boxes aside from the bragging rights. Shuttle's [shuttle.com] XPC line might do the trick and actually take up less space...
    • by lewko ( 195646 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @03:12AM (#8836014) Homepage
      I am reminded of a geek friend who got really excited when he acquired a raised-floor system being thrown out of an ex-server room.

      He told me his wife had even agreed to let him install it in their bedroom.

      I said to him "why do you need a raised floor? I know how few cables you are running and you certainly don't have gas fire suppression or HVAC".

      He looked at me like an idiot and said "yeah, but dude... It's a RAISED FLOOR!"

      Sadly, I could totally see his point...
  • Why not laptops? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by chrispyman ( 710460 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:01PM (#8834237)
    Seriously, laptops are great as far as size is concerned and as a bonus come with battery backup! Rackmount cases really aren't that small (atleast not the 1U type), just thin and long. A few small factor form PCs would probably work better unless you're really sure you want rackmount. Rackmounts are better left in the server room I say.
  • The thing about rackmounts is that they're terribly noisy, especially 1U units, because they've got numerous, small, high-rpm fans. It's a real cacaphony of noise and heat so if you don't have a separate room for them, you'll get sick of them really quickly. There's also the price premium you pay for 1U cases and low-profile memory compared to normal parts. If you need multiple systems at home, I'd suggest mini-PC's from Shuttle. Small, quiet, and cheaper than rackmounts (slightly more than regular whitebox PCs). They're flat on top so they're very stackable... 3 or 4 of them would take up the space of a normal fullsize tower. They take normal PC components, and they have 100mbps network adapters built in (some of the high-end P4 units might have 1000mbps, I'm not sure) A barebones Shuttle w/ sound, network, and video costs between $220 and $400. After that cost you just need to drop in a CPU, ram, and disk drive. Quite affordable. At least one supercomputer cluster chose Shuttle PCs, I forget which one. This is my second Slashdot post in a few weeks extolling these things. I don't work for them, honest. I'm just a very satisfied customer. :P
    • by jjeffries ( 17675 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:43PM (#8834498)
      OH, I DUNNO, I HAVE A BUNCH OF DELL RACKMOUNTS, AND AT FIRST I THOUGHT THEY WERE KINDA LOUD BUT NOW I HARDLY NOTICE IT. I AM WORKING ON A 2.4GHZ 2650 WITH 5 DISKS IN MY OFFICE RIGHT NOW AND IT HARDLY MAKES A WHISPER.

      oh my gosh how terrible the lameness filter is trying to foil my message, lowercase lowercase lowercase text text text text one two three four i love the marine corps happy fun ball sorry dave i'm afraid i can't do that my very educated mother blahblahblah
    • Mod parent ... oh, he is already at 5.

      More seriously, I worked at a place where we had to test a new rack for our server farm.
      It was one (1) Dell rack and running in our office for two weeks or so ...
      While it was somewhat cool to have a rack in your office ;-), it was VERY noisy, we had problems to communicate. Whenever we switched it off, it was a huge relief.
      These things are build to run in a separated room, 24/7 under maximum load. So cooling is the first priority, while noise reduction is a non-issue.
  • by crmartin ( 98227 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:06PM (#8834269)
    It was a little bit of a surprise to me when I visited rackspace.com a year or so ago, but they have a very high density scheme with no racks to speak of. Instead, they get steel-wire shelves like these [orbiscorporation.com], put cheap x86 boxes -- they actually assembler their own from commodity parts, which certainly makes sense if you're setting up thousands of boxes as they do -- in minitowers on them, and cable them with conventional cables tied with plastic cable ties.

    Works great, relatively cheap, and you can do something else with the "rack" later if you want.
    • by chrsbrwn ( 14235 ) <chrsbrwn@gmai[ ]om ['l.c' in gap]> on Monday April 12, 2004 @12:34AM (#8835469)

      Yeah, well, sometimes you get what you pay for :(

      Note that my experience comes from both working in a datacenter (a competitor to Rackspace, won't say who), and from having a home rack built out of that wire shelving. There are pros and cons to both sides.

      The biggest pro, of course, to the cheap white box and wire shelving way is the cheapness factor. The problem is that this is only an advantage while you have a lot of extra space in the data center. You can only get 9 or 12 white boxes in a rack stacked vertically, you can get 42 1U servers in a single rack. 3 times the density, basically. Plus, in my experience with our legacy cheap whiteboxes, they are far more likely to have hardware failures (power supply, motherboard, etc.) than the higher class hardware (mostly IBM, some Dell and HP). Hard drives fail in everything, but the whiteboxes are a pain in the ass to take apart to replace them. The rackmount servers open right up, and everything is right there where you can get to it. Also, the nonserver motherboards and bioses that were put in the whitebox have various issues with our automated build systems (varying NICs, some supporting PXE boot, some not, different array controllers, etc). You can control some of this by buying the same parts from the same vendors, but consumer systems don't have the build stability that server oriented systems do. Even if you are buying exactly the same model, you can find components (and drivers!) changing from one revision to the next depending on where the manufacturer got the best deal.

      Now, as to the home environment, like I said, I have a wire shelf rack, with a bunch of different stuff on it (Suns, PCs, Powermacs). The main reason I am probably going to buy a real rack for the new house I just bought is flexibility. You can't easily move shelves around or add shelves to one of those wire units without taking the whole thing apart. If you only have tower systems, all exactly the same height, this is probably not a big deal. You just make all the shelves the right space for the tower systems, and leave them in place. But if you have a mix of stuff, and you want to maximize your space usage, you really want to put stuff horizontal, each on a separate shelf. This is when a real rack comes into its own. There are a variety of shelves available (some that slide out, some statically mounted, etc). Adding or moving a shelf is just a matter of 4 or 6 bolts. Most server class hardware has available rackmount addons (all of my Suns do). Another factor is cable management, currently I have a mess of wires all velcroed together... good racks come with cable management built in, and it is usually fairly cheap to add to a rack afterwards even if it doesn't come with it. And note that if you shop on ebay, or can find a good local remarketer/recycler (one who buys stuff from closing companies), then rackmount hardware and even the racks can actually be cheaper than buying wire shelving brand new. My 7 foot tall wire shelving unit cost me $350 to build... I have seen full racks, with side panels and everything, for $150 or so on ebay. What kills on these things is the shipping, so finding a local remarketer or ebay seller like another poster mentioned is definitely a good idea. You could double the price of a rack with the shipping charges.

    • It was a little bit of a surprise to me when I visited rackspace.com a year or so ago, but they have a very high density scheme with no racks to speak of.

      That scheme is most certainly NOT "high density". It is extremely LOW density; in the space of a dozen desktop machines(if that; probably more like 8), I can place FORTY TWO 1U rackmount systems. Uh huh. You read that right. That's not even as dense as you can get- the ultimate are blade servers, of which you can fit something like a dozen in 4-5U of

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:07PM (#8834271)
    Rack mounted PCs are not built for home use. Their cooling fans are deafening, so if you don't live alone you'll either have to sacrifice a room to them and keep the door shut (which then might lead to cooling issues), or risk driving your housemates insane. You' be better off buying a few small form-factor systems, like Shuttles or a small ATX case with only the drive bays and slots that you plan to use.

    You could also go the virtual machine route and buy one extremely tricked-out machine and a copy of Virtual PC. Microsoft appears to be using it for multi-machine setups when they send out training and demo CDs now, so having several real PCs to do testing and training is no longer necessary.
  • 4 post racks... (Score:5, Informative)

    by MrChuck ( 14227 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:07PM (#8834273)
    I have a couple data center racks (no, thank you ebay). proper 4 post 19" racks.

    They provide a fair amount of silence too (a bit of foam along the sides where it doesn't obstruct air flow dampens it a lot.

    There's a switch, a terminal server, a patch panel, a router (IOS testing mostly), and 7 computers.

    The patch panel is new and GLORIOUS. It means I have all the serial ports and network ports and ports for the rest of the house in one panel.

    3 of these computer have rack ears. I found rack sliders, put 3/4" ply between them to make a pull out shelf and have a couple Sparc20s, a NeXT and an SGI sitting sideways on them. beneath is another shelf with 2 tower cases sitting there.

    Why not all rackable computers? mainly cost. An $80 case with an enermax or antec power supply (I'll *only* use Antec, but enermax was acceptable when it came with the case. The rest are crap. 5V should not be 4.6V when the graphics card get hammered). 2U rack cases (cheaper than 1U cause you get a bit of headroom and can use regular RAM) cost several hundred. The ones I have I got from a dot com moving from dozens of random machines to dozens of the same damn machines. I won; they became maintainable.

    I like 4 post racks. The shelves made it easy to put stuff in. Relay racks (just the front ears) work for many people to. If you have another room for the 'puters, then you can consider it. Shouldn't cost more then 120 Euro really.

    Make your own
    Any pro audio store (PA systems, not CD players) can tell you where to get rack rails. All my pro audio gear was rackable and I have several 4U (not deep enough for 'puters) road cases. So go buy a pair or 3' tall rails and build a nice box out of HEAVY ply. It will meet all your needs. If not, any carpenter should be able to build you a box for a few quid.

  • Go mini. (Score:5, Informative)

    by supabeast! ( 84658 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:08PM (#8834276)
    I spent some time looking at this found found a few flaws in using standard rackmount systems at home. First, the damned things are long; often extending to the full 36" deep that a standard IT rack holds. Rackmount systems are also very noisy, because they incorporate small high-speed fans.

    For home systems, you would be much better off just using mini-itx. For some ideas, take a look at http://www.mini-itx.com.

    Another option to consider is XBoxes, especially if you're handy with a soldering iron and can install mod chips yourself. Buy it for $150, add some extra RAM if you need it.
  • Ghetto Rack baby (Score:5, Informative)

    by Hardwyred ( 71704 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:12PM (#8834314) Homepage
    When we did our house, I had a choice. We could afford a rack, or a few ebay rack mount cases (the 30 dollar 4u jobbies that were around a little bit ago). We went with the cases and I built a rack out of 2x4s and 1x2s [jasonandjessi.com]
  • by Zenin ( 266666 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:17PM (#8834349) Homepage
    Aside from the "kewl" factor, rack mount systems for the job described will be very expensive, underpowered, incredibly noisy, and of limited expandability. This is mostly because if you're talking about saving space you pretty much have to be talking about 1U systems, which sacrifice a lot for their form factor (thinness).

    What's a better plan?

    I'd recommend Shuttle [shuttle.com] mini-PCs or similar (a few makes are available now). Hugely cheaper then rackmount, much quieter, better expansion (two or three internal hard drives if you don't use floopy or CDROM), and honestly SMALLER then 1U systems. Remember as thin as 1U systems are they are 19" wide (before you add the rack which adds a few more) and are typically very deap (20+ inches often). They are also much heavier then Shuttle systems. Furthermore, so long as you stay away from the mini-ITX based brands (Via, yuck!) they have every wiz-bang feature you could ask from a full size PC (duel channel DDR400, hyperthreading, USB 2.0, Gigabit lan, firewire, etc, etc) built in (see the Shuttle X in particular).

    You'll have a much easier time moving three of these small boxes around (get a small carry-on suitcase) then a 4U rack case, and your ears will thank you.
  • Consider vmware.. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by RedPhoenix ( 124662 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:23PM (#8834380)
    I have a P3-700 box that currently has three Linux, a Win2k, a WinXP and a Win2003 partition running under VMWare.

    Heck of a lot nicer than having to worry about the noise, heat and space requirements for the 6 physical systems I would require.

    May be worth considering.. Disk space can be managed reasonably well, and as I am only actively using one (or perhaps two) systems at any one moment in time, each box claws it's way out of swap into real-memory pretty quickly and provides pretty reasonable interactive performance.

    Red.
  • by rustycage ( 550599 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:23PM (#8834384)
    Wal-Mart [walmart.com] has a selection of rack mount severs. Look pretty cheap to me.
    • Re:Try Wal-Mart (Score:3, Informative)

      by bhtooefr ( 649901 )
      That's for the motherboard, PSU, case, and MAYBE optical drives. No CPU, no RAM, no HDD - those are underneath the server's link.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 12, 2004 @02:08AM (#8835827)
      I sense a great disturbance in the force...As if a thousand network admins spontaneously burst into flames and Sam Walton again walked the earth.

      *shudder*
  • by Cervantes ( 612861 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:26PM (#8834407) Journal
    Talk about timely... I just installed my rack-mount at home this weekend. :)

    Now, admittedly, it's a fully enclosed lan case, but still...

    I got lucky with mine, in that I work for a company that sells all types of office supplies, including PC stuff, and I got the 6.5' beast for all of $10(CDN)... but I have seen them floating around for relatively cheap prices, especially as offices move and go for freestanding racks instead of enclosed cases.

    Why an enclosed case? Noise is the big one. It's just worth it to have as much soundproofing as possible when you're running multiple PCs. It also looks cleaner, stopping prospective nerd-chicks from saying "I was going to do you, but your wires are all messy!". And, finally, it allows for nifty modding (word to the wise: If you're going to cut holes in the 2mm steel side with a Dremel, be sure to wear non-flamible clothing. A, uh, friend told me... yeah).

    For cases... well, I considered getting a few 2U cases... but then I thought of noise, and cost, and it just wasn't worth it. I'm just now (literally, just took a break to let the dust clear) building my own cases our of 1/2" wood. Given the size of my rack and how I'm laying things out, I'll end up with 19" x 19.5" x 6" cases, more than enough to hold a full ATX board, 2 CDs and 2 HDs (and floppy [the drive, not the rabbit]). If you didn't need many externals, you could fit 2 ATX boards in there.

    Cooling? I'm buying an 80CFM, 0.5 Sone air transfer fan... I'll hook all the cases up via dryer venting and PVC pipe, and the only noise in my entire case will be this one uber-quiet fan, and 1 PSU per case (which is made of sound-dampening wood). As I figure to max out at 3 cases, I expect excellent quietness.

    Access? I hinged the side door of the case for easy access, and my case layout has all the hookups on the side of the case, not the back. Much easier when, say, you want to change mouse cables, or hook up a USB device. Sure, you think you won't do much, but whether it's rack or case, do you really want to be fiddling around back trying to plug a cable in without unplugging the other 150?

    Interface? Forget rack-mount monitors and keyboards... get a KVM. They're cheap, easy, and I've had very few problems with any I've used. At high res they do ghost occasionally, but I only notice it now when I look for it. I'm currently using an Avocent Switchview 4-port, and it has behaved itself quite well. (Don't get a manual switch... autos are just all around better).

    Overall, though it was a bitch to get here and get fixed up, I'm already happy now that it's in place. Instead of having 3 PCs with 2-3 fans each, 2 laptop docking stations sitting behind me looking ugly, and all my networking EQ sitting with it's wires hanging out, I have 1 fashionable case, with blacklights and other esoteric touches, that my cats can't run through and knock over, my roommates can't fiddle with, and no-one complains about unattractive PC equipment. It's quieter, more convenient, and damnit, it just looks cool!

    The bottom line? Don't bother with rack rails and expensive, ugly cases and your wires flopping out in the breeze.... pick up a full rack case and build your own boxen. And remember, it gives you the best pick-up line a nerd could ever ask for... "Hey baby, wanna see my huge LAN rack?"
  • by thx2001r ( 635969 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:28PM (#8834413) Homepage
    That way, you've got as many as you want, $150 each, running Linux [sourceforge.net]... life is good! Get a decent switch and away you go! And, they don't take up too much room or make too much noise... just get a table and stack 'em.
  • Power Supplies (Score:5, Informative)

    by Dark Bard ( 627623 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:28PM (#8834416)
    I notice you mentioned switching the power supplies. Do be careful when you come to the States. I did a location in New Zealand and took my systems with me. I asked around and everyone said no problem switching the power supplies from 110 to 220. When I hooked everything up it fried two out of three motherboards and cooked one CPU. When I came back to the States I didn't take any chances and switched the power supplies. Power supplies are a lot cheaper than motherboards. I'd do it and call it cheap insurance. For under a hundred bucks US you can swap off three power supplies if you do the work yourself.
  • by telemonster ( 605238 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:29PM (#8834420) Homepage
    It starts out innocently... then another rack, then another...

    Old pic:
    old picture [757tech.net]

    • by stor ( 146442 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @02:48AM (#8835959)
      I like this one [carcino.gen.nz]

      If I started doing rack-mount in my house, I'd end up with that. I simply have to restrict the number of concurrently-running computers in my place to retain any semblance of a sane environment.

      Often the first thing a woman says when she walks into my apartment (usually with a matter-of-fact-but-obviously-unimpressed tone): "Gee, you have a lot of wires".

      Cheers
      Stor
  • by nweaver ( 113078 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:30PM (#8834423) Homepage
    You sound like the perfect candidate for a small-form-factor arrangement, either a couple of Via Epia systems in very small boxes, or low end Shuttle cubes.

    This gives a nice compromise: Much lower cost (racks are expensive), LESS volume in practice (Racks are DEEP, its hard to find a deep storage closet, but small form factor systems may be taller but aren't as deap), and easily available.

    True, reliability isn't as good, but you aren't talking about ultra-reliable systems anyway, and you said you didn't need high performance.
  • Why not go VM? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nurb432 ( 527695 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:31PM (#8834435) Homepage Journal
    Instead of 3 separate boxes ( with their associated power issues, OS issues, maintenance, etc ) to deal with, just get one really nice one.. and run VMware on it..

    It should be cheaper, for a home user.. and has other advantages as well. Such as easy manageability, quickly recovering blown systems after a bad test, changing OS's on the fly..

    Just make sure to get tons of RAM ( which is cheaper then an entire machine )
  • by LinuxHam ( 52232 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:34PM (#8834455) Homepage Journal
    Eastern Pennsylvania. Any day, any time. You gotta help drag it out. Contact me. Bring a pickup truck. Used to house ooooooold DECtalk gear. Still has 1 4U DECtalk unit installed, if you ever wanted to do text-to-voice with DTMF readback over 8 phone lines at once.

    I also am a strong proponent of virtualization if possible. I'm up to about 15 virtual machines running under VMWare ESX, and I started a new box intended to run Linux VMs using usermode linux. Now that "virtualization" is a key buzzword for 2004, I don't think I'll ever get around to populating the rack with gear. Get it out of my house.
  • My two cents (Score:5, Informative)

    by value_added ( 719364 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:35PM (#8834466)

    1. Rackmount equipment generally costs more.

    2. The space you'll save is directly proportional to the extra airflow (read "fans") you'll need. The smaller the unit and/or the more stuff inside each unit, the more fans you'll need and the more noise you'll end up with.

    3. A 4U unit is about the same size as a tower PC. Invariably, a 4U is designed to use more fans than a typical tower PC and as a result will be noisier. A typical 2U unit is designed with 3 mid-case fans, and an exhaust fan (in addition to the fans on the power supply fan and the processor). Swap out all the fans for the quietest replacements you can buy, and you'll still end up with something you'll want to put in another room or far away from where you work.

    4. Rack enclosures are expensive. Audio racks and relay racks, while cheaper, are NOT appropriate for any number of reasons. You can, however, find budget or used enclosures (still not cheap), just as you can design your own (a week in the garage). Rack accessories are also expensive. You can find a Slashdot article on the subject of enclosures here [slashdot.org].

    If by home use, you're implying you intend to put everything in a specially-ventilated and sound-proofed closet or recording-studio grade enclosure, another room, or basement, I'd say go for it. If not, you'll regret it.

  • On Topic Response (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:36PM (#8834467)
    Just buy a 4 foot painted aluminum 19" open telco rack. Put heavy duty rubber casters on it. Install an APC SmartUPS 1200XL RM in the bottom of the rack . . . will keep the rack from tipping over. Tie the rack to the power ground of the feed to the UPS for static dissipation. You can then rack-up three or four 19" rackmount cases, with plenty of room to spare for a rackmount ethernet switch or a router at the top.

    We use them at all of our ISP POP locations.
    • by aminorex ( 141494 )
      Don't forget to ground each case independently.

      Man o mister, ground loops suck to debug.
    • Just buy a 4 foot painted aluminum 19" open telco rack

      Very bad idea unless you're mounting very shallow stuff or very tall stuff; there is a reason they call them "telco" or "relay" racks; telco/network gear is never very deep(long), unless it's also very tall, so it doesn't exert much outward pull on the screws. Think about the mechanics of it- and yes, it's not pretty when that 2U DB server with 4 very expensive SCSI disks makes Unintentional Ground Contact because the screws all stripped out.

      Go with

  • by tyrani ( 166937 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @09:36PM (#8834471)
    My home rack has been working great.

    First, be carefull about where you put it. Mine is tucked away under the stairs in the basement. A 19" rack fit perfecly in the closet that I built around it. I have an automatic dehumidfier and some (motherboard based hacked) temperature sensors, and a bathroom ventalation fan. When I'm in the basement, I can't hear anything at all.

    Next, buy yourslef a CAT 5 KVM Extender. It is absolutly indespensable. I very rarely have to go down to manually press a button and the KVM extender has eliminated the need for an expensive rack mount keyboard and monitor. I just have a cheap KVM switch connected to my family rig in the den.

    I agree with other posters, go buy a 4U rackmount case and make sure that you have at least a couple of rack mount shelves for routers and other misc stuff.

    The neighbours all know that I work as a geek, but showing them my Rack when they come over demonstrates that I live like one too :)
  • Hi,

    I can only fully recommend the Mappit A4F 19-1HE [mappit.de] , which comes in a black chassis ready for a 19" rack. I bought my first one recently, and it's doing a great job. This box is ideal for servers run in private homes, since they are low-energy consumption (low-$$ when run 24/7 like mine) and low-noise (can live in a corner of your living-room without being noticed).

    It's built by a German company, but they shipped it to the UK quickly and hassle-free, so they might as well ship to the US.

    A friend of mine, who had first recommended the Mappit series to me, runs a set of smaller ones [mappit.de]. All solid metal cases, and Linux/BSD installed easily (no 'Microsoft tax').

    > Rackmount? For 3 pcs? Something small? ... ATX!

    Yes and yes -- luckily, that's not a contradiction at all.

    Happy Easter, all!

    Jochen
  • Use Mid-towers (Score:3, Interesting)

    by gvc ( 167165 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:12PM (#8834693)
    I run a couple of dozen PCs with a couple of terabytes using garden-variety mid-tower cases sitting on 2 parallel steel shelving units with an aisle in between.

    The backs of the machines are to the aisle and I have a common keyboard/monitor/mouse setup with long extension cables that I swap as necessary.

    I run Linux so I only need the keyboard and console in exceptional circumstances. If I were forced to run Windows, I would use VNC and a similar setup.

    Each machine has 4 ATA hard drives and no CD. For system setup, I do a network install initiated from a floppy. All other maintenance is over the network.

    While this setup is a little bit clumsier than a rack system might be, it is far cheaper because it is built 100% from commodity components.
  • by $ASANY ( 705279 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:13PM (#8834699) Homepage
    Rackmounts are great. My linux server/router is in a 2U rackmount enclosure, and I'm pleased with the form factor, the extra fans, and the huge amount of space available for hard drives. Since most network cards are half-height, it's no problem to put multiple ethernet cards in the box. What made this easier was that this case was something I got on eBay -- it had been a load balancer and had multiple RJ-45 connectors on the front. Rather handy for my purposes.

    Rackmounts of the 1U and 2U variety are handy when you can get them with the connections in the places you need them. Most have connections in the back, which for a geek is a bit of a pain since it means moving stuff around a lot every time we need to change something. A few have some important connections (or all of them) in the front, which makes for supreme ugliness but really handy to work on. Other than that, you need to pay attention to the size of the expansion cards you plan on putting in, as a riser card (to allow full-size cards in a 1U or 2U case) can often be more expensive than the cards you're planning to install.

    At 4U cases and larger, it's pretty much the same size of a regular case in a horizontal configuration and at a fair premium over a standard case. Rarely are there any additional features other than for cooling. Unless there's a need for hot-swappable drives or something like that, it's not terribly useful.

    Remember that 1U and 2U cases tend to be a fair amount deeper than a standard case, which yields somewhat about the same case volume as a cheaper standard case. So unless you have depth available with how you want to set it up, it can case trouble. But if you need to stack things up, stuff someting next to ceiling joists, or have a dedicated 19-inch width area for electronics, you're not saving yourself much. When that's the case though, this is a really great solution.

    And it looks cool too. My $400 linux server/router sitting in a box that says "Intel NetStructure Traffic Director", which probably cost ten times that much. I feel like someone who has a car kit where they turn a VW bug into something that looks like a street rod.

  • by KC7GR ( 473279 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:14PM (#8834702) Homepage Journal
    The used/surplus market can really be your friend once you get to the States. Some areas are better supplied than others. For example, the Seattle area has RE-PC, [repc.com] which bills itself as the largest used/recycled computer place in the northwest (probably true -- I've not found any other computer surplus place in the region quite so large). I see rackmount cases and parts turn up there all the time, at both the retail locations, and the prices are generally pretty cheap.

    The SF Bay Area part of California has a generous supply of used electronics and computer places too numerous to list in any detail here. At the risk of load-testing my web server, I have a page at this link [bluefeathertech.com] that lists all the Bay Area surplus places that I knew of as of my last (annual) trip to the area in 2003.

    I would, however, like to point out one place in particular in the Bay Area. Weird Stuff Warehouse [weirdstuff.com] has to be seen to be believed, though their prices can be a little on the high side, IMO.

    I also have store and swap meet listings for the Puget Sound region [bluefeathertech.com] and the metro Portland area [bluefeathertech.com] of Oregon.

    Outside of the retail surplus scene, amateur ("ham") radio swap meets can also be excellent sources of such parts. I bought my original rack case from one of the Bay Area events back in 2000, and it is still serving me well today. You can search for hamfests close to whatever area you'll be moving to at this link. [arrl.org]

    I hope that helps. Rackmount stuff is great fun, and scrounging for it (and other parts) even more so. Definitely part of the "Tinkerer's Spirit."

    Enjoy your travels.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:22PM (#8834768)
    I got lucky. A company I had connections to
    dumped a bunch of older equipment, and I managed
    to get a very nice full size rack, for free!

    that said...

    rack stuff is more expensive, though it's getting
    less so.

    put the rack on casters, and make sure that they
    are rated to carry the weight of your rack
    maxed out with equipment.

    I love this. Combined with hard floors, it
    makes it very easy to pull the rack away from
    the wall to make changes, or clean under it.

    *** Make sure the combined height is less
    than the doorway. This will allow you to
    move it out of the room for painting or other
    room maintenance. In fact, when I got the
    rack, I put my desk and two file cabinets on
    casters, too.

    Get rails for the cases. I leave the case lid
    screws off, too. Makes it very easy to slide
    out the cases and pop the lids for changes and
    maintenance.

    Be sure to make cables long enough to
    accomodate the length needed when the cases
    are fully pulled out.

    Tiewrap cables that can be pulled out,
    (i.e., usb, keyboard, mouse) to the back
    of the case to act as strain relief when
    sliding the case.

    Check the alignment of the rails that the
    equipment screws into, left to right, front
    to back. Use a couple of 2U blanks at the
    top and bottom.

    When I built my first rack case 5 or 6 years
    ago there weren't as many choices, seemingly,
    for manufacturers as now, and I over did it
    with a big Sliger. Since then I've built a
    couple more using Compute-Aid 4U boxen

    http://www.compute-aid.com/

    which are well built and fairly priced,
    though it's been of couple years since I checked
    them out.

    Heating isn't a problem with 4U cases.
    ATX mobo's leave plenty of room for chassis
    fans. Cases frequently can be ordered with
    a cross brace that accomodates additional
    chassis fans.

    Try and keep the heavy stuff near the bottom.
    For me, top to (near) bottom:
    ham radio stuff
    17" monitor for the router box
    (I'd love to change this to an lcd,
    but they're too much money)
    mini-keyboard for the router on sliding
    shelf
    1U shelf for the dsl box
    1U shelf for the 8 port hub
    workstation 4U box
    old workstation now file server 4U box
    router 4U box
    APC rackmount UPS (heaviest of all)

    That's all I can think of.

    Good luck
  • by pvera ( 250260 ) <pedro.vera@gmail.com> on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:31PM (#8834819) Homepage Journal
    Try the Defense Reutilization Marketing Office (DRMO), an agency that DoD uses to get rid of surplus equipment. All of the armed services use the standard 19" form factor and sometimes you can get lucky and find one at DRMO for very little money. You can probably refurbish one for the cost of a couple cans of paint, maybe a power strip and a couple fans.
  • Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @10:35PM (#8834846)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Alternative to racks (Score:3, Informative)

    by linuxbikr ( 699873 ) <.moc.gnirpsdnim. .ta. .gnirekcipm.> on Sunday April 11, 2004 @11:10PM (#8835032)
    If you just need a three or four PCs for simulating production environments, why not look at getting a bunch of Mini-PCs like the Shuttle XPC line. These boxes are the size of a toaster and sit comfortable on a good size desk. You could easily fit four of these little boxes on a desk along with a monitor, mouse and keyboard, a 4 port KVM and a small hub. Doesn't weigh a ton and it is a lot cheaper than a rack setup. Very compact too.

    I have a Shuttle XPC for gaming purposes fitted with an Athlon XP 2800+, 512MB RAM, a DVD-ROM and an 80GB hard disk. For full featured computing needs in a small package, you can't beat it.

  • Supermicro (Score:4, Insightful)

    by macdaddy ( 38372 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @11:18PM (#8835079) Homepage Journal
    It really doesn't sound like you need to spring for a rackmount system. It will cost you more in the end if you go that route. Still, if you want to, I would not build your own system. You'll drop a couple hundred at least on a rackmount case and $50 to $100 on a PSU for it. The mobo will be at least $300 since it's a rack mount mobo and thus a server mobo. Add in the 1U CPUs and fans and possibly short DIMMs and you'll find you could have spent less money buying a complete system. I recommend you look into the SuperMicro line. They have dozens to choose from. I have a 6013P-T and love it. I bought might from Wendy @ Acmemicro [acmemicro.com] also known as 8anet.com [8anet.com].
  • Really Loud! (Score:4, Informative)

    by MichaelKaiserProScri ( 691448 ) on Sunday April 11, 2004 @11:40PM (#8835186)

    Also, keep in mind that most rack mountable computers are REALLY LOUD (think "idling jet engine loud). The smaller the "U" of the case, the louder it is. Those 1U and 2U cases are jam packed with all sorts of stuff that gets hot. They compensate for that with high flow fans and those fans are LOUD.

    Also rack mount cases for the "build it yourself" PC's cost $100 - $150 more than standard cases.

    The "gee-whiz" factor is great, though.

  • by OgGreeb ( 35588 ) <og@digimark.net> on Sunday April 11, 2004 @11:49PM (#8835246) Homepage
    I operate a bunch of machines in a datacenter but do my sysadmin from home. As a result, I have a nice installation here, in a side room of my basement near my home office, connected to the Internet through a Covad T1.

    I use (2) 2-post relay racks from Great Lakes Case & Cabinet [greatcabinets.com], they were ~$300 each. I bought 19" shelves, rack power strips and mini keyboards (that fit on a rack shelf) from Milestek [milestek.com] (very inexpensive), and some used APC rack mount 1400W Smart-UPS (one per rack, mounted at the bottom). I did as others have done and built machines into 4U Siliconrax-Sliger SRCX475 rack cases [siliconrax-sliger.com]. They are not quiet, but I haven't found them as noisy as others have mentioned.

    I used a 15" CRT for the KVM monitor (both because it was cheap and because, unlike flat panels, they will sync to many more video signals.). I'm using a Black Box ServManager KVM, and it works well, but I don't recommend it because you can do the same thing with cheaper equipment (Belkin). The relay racks are incredibly strong, and I've mounted quite a bit in them. Between the two racks I have several 1U switches, a firewall, the 4U ServManager KVM, a 15" Dell monitor I picked up cheap with the purchase of a server, keyboard, 7 mixed 4U and 1U machines, a 4U robotic tape jukebox, 3 2U power strips, and a 4U lockbox for storing loose bits. All the cables are run along the sides and behind the relay racks -- with a full installation I don't see the wires too much. The relay racks have the option of using casters, and while I didn't buy them, I recommend them to others -- it lets you roll the relay racks out to
    get behind them.

    I had an electrician run separate 15A circuits from my mains panel to each relay rack's UPS, and I also had him install a manual generator transfer switch and heavy-gauge cable to an outside junction box, so I can plug in my generator. (An aside -- if you are going to use a generator to keep things going in a blackout, put a cheap, low wattage light plugged into one of the UPS and turned off, so that it is available to be turned on so you can see what you are doing while switching over to generator and for general tinkering if the place you have your equipment doesn't have a light fixture.)

    It looks impressive to have everything mounted this way, and keeps everything tidy.
  • by dilute ( 74234 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @12:27AM (#8835443)
    The same article was posted in December.

    Here [slashdot.org]

    Deja voodoo.

  • Scalable Rack (Score:3, Informative)

    by Ridgelift ( 228977 ) on Monday April 12, 2004 @12:35AM (#8835475)
    Why rack mounted? Well, I want to save space and only have the bare minimum systems (no need for multiple CD-ROMS, monitors, no sound-cards, just lots of memory and HD space). I also will add to this in the future, so don't want to limit myself to just a few pcs on the system.

    I had the same idea you did, except it was for small businesses who wanted to start with a small rack system, then add later.

    So I had this built, a scalable rack. [forrestmods.com] Since a standard rack is 42U high, I had it built to be 1/7th the height, or 7U. The piece sitting on the front is the cap for the rack top, and another 7U rack module is already installed, so the rack in the picture is 14U high (BTW, if anyone wants that synpotics 10Mb hub, they can have it for nothing...just gotta pay the shipping...it's heavy!)

    Unfortunately, there's not a lot of interest in a scalable, modular rack system. So there my prototype sits in fire engine red looking very pretty, but no buyers.

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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