Introduction

So I thought I’d put this up for anyone thinking of buying one of these boxes just to give an honest account of my usage of this little server as both a professional network and security engineer and also a general tech nerd. I bought my HP micro server back in January 2015 and I can honestly say it has been a fantastic addition to my household for a number of reasons.

  1. It is a great learning tool for testing concepts and ideas without risk to business production systems.
  2. Allows delving into virtualisation and all the benefits it brings to computing.
  3. Has enabled me to create a highly secure network at home utilising best practice network concepts (VLANs, network segmentation, web content filters etc.)
  4. Allows me to host websites, mail without expensive hosting costs.

CPU Install

The CPU install is very straight forward.

  1. Disconnect all cables from the motherboard
  2. Slide out the motherboard carefully
  3. Unscrew the CPU cooler
  4. Remove the stock CPU from the socket and carefully add the replacement
  5. Add some thermal paste
  6. Re-assemble

Now I have literally only just upgraded the box after using the stock processor for over a year. The stock dual core Celeron processor that came with the server was struggling under the load placed on it. Being as it is only a dual core processor what really could I expect? It did very well considering. In the end though I took the plunge and replaced it with a Xeon E3-1220. I did actually intend to use the v2 but what I actually bought was the original v1. Both use the correct socket so no harm, the v2 was just a newer manufacturing process. Note the v3 however is not compatible. It will teach me to read Ebay more carefully, but regardless, wow what an improvement it has made to the speed and capabilities. Where the server used to average at around 40% CPU usage idle it now averages around 10%. This is with 13 running always on VM’s!

The CPU upgrade also meant I had to provide some active cooling. Stock, the server is using only the passive cooler rated at 35 Watts. The Xeon E3 1220 is rated at 80. I noticed an immediate increase in temperatures once the replacement chip was in so opted to install a fantastic little 40mm case fan to force air over the cpu cooler. The fan I used was a single 40mm Noctua. This I ran off the molex using a 3 pin fan header and a cable provided with the fan to slow it from max speed to a silent two thirds of max speed. As seen in the charts, it is quite apparent I added the new chip on the 29th April, notice the CPU temperatures increase by 10 degrees. I made adjustments via the hypervisor to set to low power mode around the 1st May and added the fan on the 3rd May right where the system temperatures plunge back down again nicely.

Temperature_chart_HP_micro-server

The fan has added zero noise to the servers minimal sound (The loudest things are the disks when busy) and has a made a significant difference to the temperatures. Of course being a virtulisation host I’m running 16 GB of RAM but holding out for an upgrade to 32 GB one day if the limit is lifted from the BIOS by HP. On the remaining hardware side, the server has 2 x SSD in the 6Gb/s SATA bays (using 2.5 to 3.5 caddies) and 2 x 3TB Spinning disks in the 3GB/s bays. This provides a nice mix of speed for running the VM OS and slower general bulk storage.

Conclusion

I would certainly recommend the server both professionally and personally if you are looking for a cheapish virtulisation host with enterprise features. The one downside is the ILO requires a license to use all features. Not a show stopper but annoying. The limit on memory is also an annoyance but for a low power server it is still a great buy.

Installing an Intel Xeon E3-1220 in Gen8 HP Microserver
Tagged on:         

5 thoughts on “Installing an Intel Xeon E3-1220 in Gen8 HP Microserver

  • 26th January 2017 at 20:36
    Permalink

    Hey, can you tell me how exactly you installed the Noctua fan? Thanks!

    Reply
    • 26th January 2017 at 22:17
      Permalink

      Hi Martin, The Noctua fan is just the right size to fit in the case sideways. Ideally I would have put the fan directly on top of the passive heat sink but that would have required grinding the heat sink down which I decided was not a good idea. Turns out running the fan next to the heat sink blowing air across rather than straight down on it to it does a fine job and keeps the CPU temps nice and low. Good luck.

      Reply
  • 27th January 2017 at 17:33
    Permalink

    I’ve just replaced my stock Celeron to this beast Xeon and I want to say – Wow. Wow is not only for performance, but also idling temperature and energy efficiency. Temperature stays at the same level as Celeron: 40°C, to achieve this I’ve change bios settings of the fan to Increase cooling. This rised up fan speed from 7 to 25%. The difference in power consumption at the same setup is just 4W more for Xeon. More processor time consuming operations: around 30W more.

    Reply
  • 2nd January 2023 at 20:09
    Permalink

    Hey Dave.

    Sorry for the old topic bump,but do you have pictures of the implementation of the fan. I’m with the same setup (but with v2) and I would like to use your idea with the Noctua.

    Cheers,
    Nedko.

    Reply
    • 4th January 2023 at 21:50
      Permalink

      No worries Nedko,

      I’ve updated the post with an image. Excuse the dust, this server has since been retired but was a trusty workhorse for many years. The Noctua fan worked great though, I never had any issues with temps while running with the upgraded CPU.

      Dave

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Martin Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.