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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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#1
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Low wattage SageTV media server
I thought I'd share my SageTV media server configuration with everyone. I have two R5000-HDs, running SageTV server, with 9 1.5TB HDs. The machine is sitting in my garage, so video playback or noise was not a concern.
I have measured the wattage pull with a Kill-A-Watt. Here's the pertinent info: * Coolermaster RS-600 80+ supply: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817171036 * Intel D945GCLF2 motherboard: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813121359 * 2GB of memory: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820134192 * 8GB parallel SSD: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820208315 * Areca ARC-1120 8 port PCI-X RAID controller: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...reca%20arc1120 * 9 1.5TB Seagate hard disks: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16822148337 * 3 Powered SATA drive cages (each with an 80mm fan) - the 4SA: http://www.addonics.com/products/rai...e4rcs35nsa.asp 2 Case fans of unknown type. Includes the crappy chipset fan that comes with the D945GCLF2. One hard disk is connected to the motherboard SATA port and runs all the time since it's spooling video from my two capture cards (R5000-HD). The remaining 8 drives are connected to the Areca RAID controller and are set to spin down after 10 minutes of inactivity. The system is running XP Pro. Wattage was measured with a Kill-A-Watt: Powerup wattage : 310 (settles after 20 seconds) OS up, array spinning, capture occurring: 131 OS up, array stopped, capture occurring : 70 For those interested, if I disconnect everything except for the motherboard and SSD, it consumes 21 watts. Hope you all find this helpful! |
#2
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Thanks for the watt info.
For a low power setup I can recommend Seasonic S12II PSU. I believe it even beats your Coolermaster in efficiency. check out http://www.80plus.org/ for more info. And WDs Green power disks are very energy efficient as well 0,9-4-7 watt (1 TB) if I remember correct. If you can live without comskip there is no reason to invest in a power hungry CPU either. A VIA C7 eg. would do just fine. Rasmus
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Server: Win7 SageTV v7.1.9 GA-MA785GM-US2H Athlon 64 X2 BE-2350 2 Gb RAM 4x 1Tb WD RE-2 GP in RAID5, Adaptec 5405 Raid controller 2x firewire DVB-C FloppyDTV C/CI, 1x TechnoTrend CT-3650 CI via the LM Smart DVB Recorder plug-in. Clients: HD300 to a Samsung PS50C7705 (PN50C8000) via a DVDO Edge HD200 Placeshifter Remote: Universal Remote Control MX-980 |
#3
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What do you use the SSD for?
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#4
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The Western Digital "Green" drives are more greenwashing than any appreciable savings. Drive spin down is far more important in saving power than the 2-3 measly watts the "green" drives save. In order to get a 9TB usable array, I would've had to buy 11 of those 1TB "green" drives, which would've gotten spun down anyway. When the drives are not spinning (which in my case is >20 hours a day), they all consume the same amount of power regardless of manufacturer. The other option would be to use 6 of the 2TB drives, but that would've cost $1800 vs. $1161. There's nothing special about the WD "Green" drives, other than spinning at 5400RPMs instead of 7200RPMs, and they only save 2-3 watts each over a 7200RPM drive when spinning, but nothing when the drives are idle. Putting it another way, each of the WD 1.5TB drives would've cost me $10 more each, so $90 difference. That means I'd save about 10.5 cents in 9.259 days. It would take me 7936 days (21.7 years) at my usage rate to make that money back, so not a good financial call. To make it back with the 2TB drives vs. 1.5TB drives, it would've taken me longer than 100 years to make it back. The moral of the story is, just because it says "Green" on the drives doesn't mean they save any appreciable power. The D945CGLF2 is not "power hungry" as you assert (and it's also not the CPU consuming most of the power on the board - it's the chipset). A dual hyperthreaded 1.6Ghz CPU with 2GB of memory using 21 watts is not appreciable, and it does outperform the 2Ghz C7 considerably. I also would never put the C7 on the same level as a 330, either, in terms of performance. I've owned several C7 motherboards, one of which I tried in this system (the Jetway J7F4K1G5DS) and it could not keep up with the two R5000HD streams. Don't know where the problem was, but the D945GCLF2 works without a hitch. I kept getting "pushing it" readings from the R5000HDs. This system replaced a Q6600 server, which was pulling over 300 watts at idle. Yikes. |
#5
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The OS. Disabled swap and indexing. It boots up nice & fast! It'd be better if I used a SATA drive with better performance, but for the task at hand it works nicely.
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#6
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That is low powered - especially with all those drives. I assume it is simply a file server (ie just storing files including those created by the R5000s).
That is certainly a lot of storage space! If you are only using it for recorded shows, you could probably have around 250 complete seasons worth of shows.
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i7-6700 server with about 10tb of space currently SageTV v9 (64bit) Ceton InfiniTV ETH 6 cable card tuner (Spectrum cable) OpenDCT HD-300 HD Extenders (hooked to my whole-house A/V system for synched playback on multiple TVs - great during a Superbowl party) Amazon Firestick 4k and Nvidia Shield using the MiniClient Using CQC to control it all |
#7
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Neil,
nice set-up. I set-up something similar without RAID though. On drive spin-down and the associated spin-up I found that SageTV and the HD200 sometimes flip-over while waiting for a file from a drive which was spun down and takes its time to spin-up. How's you experience with that?
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Windows 10 64bit - Server: C2D, 6Gb RAM, 1xSamsung 840 Pro 128Gb, Seagate Archive HD 8TB - 2 x WD Green 1TB HDs for Recordings, PVR-USB2,Cinergy 2400i DVB-T, 2xTT DVB-S2 tuners, FireDTV S2 3 x HD300s |
#8
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I use that Intel Atom 330 mainboard for a gateway and file server 45W and she sleeps at night with wakeup on alarm (ClarkConnect gateway software). I'm building a Sage HTPC AMD 5050E, M3A78-T, Hauppauge 1800 and small 80G SATA boot. I plan to capture directly to the server HD (for H.264 conversion Apple TV, etc).
Not sure how well it'll work but there's the fun.
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ASUS M3A78-T, AMD5050E, 2G DDR2, Radeon 4550 HDMI fanless, HVR-2250, HVR-1600, AppleTV, MCE Remote |
#9
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Seems like it's nearly the perfect server proc, if you don't need to do any really heavy processing. Although, with the hyperthreading, I'll bet it could run comskip without impacting the system too badly- might not be incredibly fast, but not terribly slow. |
#10
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I'm running two R5000-HDs, so that single motherboard controlled 1.5TB hard drive spins all the time since it seems to be constantly recording. So in direct answer to your question, I don't have any experience with it. I suspect the only thing I'd miss is the beginning of some early morning infomercials. ;-)
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#11
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Quote:
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Windows 10 64bit - Server: C2D, 6Gb RAM, 1xSamsung 840 Pro 128Gb, Seagate Archive HD 8TB - 2 x WD Green 1TB HDs for Recordings, PVR-USB2,Cinergy 2400i DVB-T, 2xTT DVB-S2 tuners, FireDTV S2 3 x HD300s |
#12
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Quote:
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Finally don't forget the ”warm glow” effect knowing that your system is as efficient as possible Quote:
Interesting what you write about the c7. I was thinking of building my next setup around that. Know I will reconsider. Thanks Rasmus
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Server: Win7 SageTV v7.1.9 GA-MA785GM-US2H Athlon 64 X2 BE-2350 2 Gb RAM 4x 1Tb WD RE-2 GP in RAID5, Adaptec 5405 Raid controller 2x firewire DVB-C FloppyDTV C/CI, 1x TechnoTrend CT-3650 CI via the LM Smart DVB Recorder plug-in. Clients: HD300 to a Samsung PS50C7705 (PN50C8000) via a DVDO Edge HD200 Placeshifter Remote: Universal Remote Control MX-980 |
#13
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eh, i just pay an extra $10 a month to PECO so that they buy "my electricity" from a local wind producer. the $30 or so i would save in electricity usage each year is far too little savings to make up for the time spent sourcing the lowest usage parts.
someday ill have a solar array on the roof, and disconnect from the urban grid
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MacBook Core2Duo 2 ghz nVidia 9400M GPU 46" Sammy HLP4663 720p DLP 2x HDHR, all OTA QNAP TS-809: 12.5 TB for Recordings/Imports/TimeMachine/Music HD200 via 802.11n in Living Room 802.11n client in bedroom |
#14
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Quote:
As an aside, I just tried it with an MKV and had no trouble (spinning circle for a bit longer than usual). I can see the RAID card type having an effect on how long things take to come up, too, so your mileage may vary. |
#15
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Quote:
Also, if you increase the power rate from $0.105/Kwh to $0.4/Kwh, it'll still take longer than 5 years to recoup your investment on a "Green" drive. However if your drives are spinning more than 4 hours a day, you may lower a recoup from 5 years to 4 years. ;-) But it won't be appreciable enough to be worthwhile. The problem is, most people don't do any homework on what they'd save. They hear the word "Green" or "low power" and immediately buy it based on that. Quote:
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--Neil |
#16
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Quote:
However, you drive the point home - one needs to evaluate what they'd save in their configuration. There is no "one size fits all" situation in terms of saving money on power and/or heat. Last edited by neilbradley; 05-23-2009 at 10:20 PM. |
#17
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Quote:
I guess you might consume around 4 watt extra per drive in running mode (again I don't know about Seagate but thats the difference between the green and the non-green WDs I have). Times that by 9 and you equivalent to a small light bulb heating up system when running. You'll need extra cooling and have more noise. Quote:
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/intel-...iew-30931.html Good to hear that might have changed Quote:
Rasmus
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Server: Win7 SageTV v7.1.9 GA-MA785GM-US2H Athlon 64 X2 BE-2350 2 Gb RAM 4x 1Tb WD RE-2 GP in RAID5, Adaptec 5405 Raid controller 2x firewire DVB-C FloppyDTV C/CI, 1x TechnoTrend CT-3650 CI via the LM Smart DVB Recorder plug-in. Clients: HD300 to a Samsung PS50C7705 (PN50C8000) via a DVDO Edge HD200 Placeshifter Remote: Universal Remote Control MX-980 |
#18
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Quote:
Rasmus
__________________
Server: Win7 SageTV v7.1.9 GA-MA785GM-US2H Athlon 64 X2 BE-2350 2 Gb RAM 4x 1Tb WD RE-2 GP in RAID5, Adaptec 5405 Raid controller 2x firewire DVB-C FloppyDTV C/CI, 1x TechnoTrend CT-3650 CI via the LM Smart DVB Recorder plug-in. Clients: HD300 to a Samsung PS50C7705 (PN50C8000) via a DVDO Edge HD200 Placeshifter Remote: Universal Remote Control MX-980 |
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