:wink:
I looked at Tyan's when they first came out with dual Athlons.
The Thunder had a bunch of problems not to mention a screwy power supply connection.
The Tiger MPX dual board looks ok, and has worked for awhile.
Tyan has a history of using Promise chips on their mobos. I don't think
much of their chips, or anyone that uses them on a quality mobo.
If the board included scsi, LVD or higher, plus a cheaper option for a scsi raid, has it ever occured to you that the board and raid card might be cheaper then a decent dual channel scsi raid controller?
Problem is adaptec makes most of the boards, and sometimes they suck.
So, what are your requirements Santilli? Once you have determined that, you'll find the appropriate price range that resonates with that special ring of value for you.
I'm always looking for a point worth upgrading. I look for a time when processors are at least 2x, hopefully 3X-5X faster. I'm also after
a time when market demand, and cost, are down.
And, I'm looking for a boot array that allows me to use my X 15's to full capacity, which really should be in the 160 mb-180 MB range, not 110 mb/sec.
I was "misinformed" on my ATTO raid card purchase. It's NOT a 64 bit
compatible card, so, it's not forward compatible with 64 bit slots.
Friends have similar drive setups on macs running in the ranges I described, or higher.
So, a Supermicro, scsi, and raid card equipped mobo starts looking pretty reasonable when you need a new mobo 64 bit capable, and a raid card capable of 64 bit.
In other words, last time I bought a raid card it was 700 bucks.
I could, or should have, bought a Supermicro with Adaptec raid card, for about the same amount of money, and, perhaps dual processor capable.
Add in the price of the mobo, and the Athlon chip, and I could have bought the mobo, card, and procesor, now, anyway. At the time, Tyan
sucked, and Supermicro was ok, but the Intel chips cost more then my car.
Always nice to hear what a true expert, Splash has to say about the subject, because I know he has looked at the options, and, as he has said, scsi narrows your choices. His well thought out, practical look at the issue is what I'm after.
When I bought my prior setup, the chip prices made Xeons out of the question. Seems to me they were around 1700 bucks for the fastest chip.
As the chip prices change, so do the dynamics of the boards, and the situations.
I realized that I'm not really a gamer. I just do research, and internet, ebay, and mail a lot.
I also like 5 years on my components. MY drives last at least that.
So, if you look at the cost for the Supermicro board, over 5 years, it doesn't seem so awful, or high.
Plus, I drive by the place on the way to Santa Clara all the time, and, there are a bunch of really good shops down there that have great prices, top flight technology, and good service.
On the otherhand, that snubby Super Redhawk SURE looked neat,...
:wink:
The other excuse I have is the 450 P3 could use a better video card for playing movies.
The voodoo 5500 should, I think, be fine for that, and, the main machine would benefit from a Matrox, I think.
The bottom line is I really enjoy talking to Splash. It's nice to talk to someone that has superior swimming skills, bigger brain for body size then humans, and has a VERY logical, and well thought out examination of the situation. :mrgrn:
Not to mention the PCI bus card space saved with onboard scsi connectors...
s
gs