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16 Core 32 Thread HP Z820 Workstation Build

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FreedomEclipse

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Well, in my haste to get back home last night, the RX 580 took a big hit. One of those times when you should of used the elevator but you went for the stairs instead... you know what I'm talking about... At least it gives me a reason to upgrade to an MSI 5700 XT Gaming 8GB GPU. Ordering now.... lets hope they can get it to my door, because that will complete this project.








Nah. youre gonna be just fine.

 

VitorSouza

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I have 240GB REvodrive sitting around Loved it when it was my boot drive) I might pull it out and see if it will fit in my next build which will be using the As Rock B350 Pro and use it with Store MI and a 512gb SSD.

You can use it on any PC, as they have an internal AHCI emulator. only the new NVME, needs to be compatible
 
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You can use it on any PC, as they have an internal AHCI emulator. only the new NVME, needs to be compatible
I still think you need to have the driver unless Windows 10 has it so you can boot from it.
 
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Nice rig man, weel done!
it remind me something ;D


As is yours. It looks good... Like a brother to my z820!

I put a Revodriver PCI-E on my Z820 and it worked perfectly View attachment 159325
View attachment 159326

Im assuming revodriver is an NVMe SDD? If so your the lucky one. Nearly all other NVMe drives cant be set up as a boot drive.

And now, a little Xeon trivia for everyone. What specific model of CPU is this? you should have all you need to figure this one out.



My 16 core / 32 thread z820 with MSI RX 5700 XT

 
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As is yours. It looks good... Like a brother to my z820!



Im assuming revodriver is an NVMe SDD? If so your the lucky one. Nearly all other NVMe drives cant be set up as a boot drive.

And now, a little Xeon trivia for everyone. What specific model of CPU is this? you should have all you need to figure this one out.



My 16 core / 32 thread z820 with MSI RX 5700 XT
2673 v2 in da house! great! when I did my rig I was looking for those, but I can't find on the net....so I took two 2667 v2 , that are similar to yours, except for an higher tdp
 
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Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
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2673 v2 in da house! great! when I did my rig I was looking for those, but I can't find on the net....so I took two 2667 v2 , that are similar to yours, except for an higher tdp

I had to go to China to get my chips, so yeah they hard to find, especially on the US market. OEM only is the primary reason. OEM chips usually have some advantages over their retail counterparts, however.
 

phill

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I had to go to China to get my chips, so yeah they hard to find, especially on the US market. OEM only is the primary reason. OEM chips usually have some advantages over their retail counterparts, however.
Why would OEM CPUs have advantages over the retail ones @storm-chaser ? Interested to find out :)
 
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System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
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Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
Display(s) Acer 23" 75Hz Gaming monitors 1080P x2
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tbh i cant stand at one fo your monitor you have a great computer and it need a good monitor companion! So replace that acer monitor please!
Yes I read you loud and clear.

Matter of fact I have 4 new monitors at home. Just have to go back and get them.

Unfortunatly they are all Acer but the actual quality of the screens is drastically improved and much higher than that other one I listed earlier. These are decent gaming level monitors with 75 hz refresh rate.

 
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System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
Processor Twin Intel Xeon E5 2673 v2 OEM processors (thats a total of 16C/32T)
Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
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Why would OEM CPUs have advantages over the retail ones @storm-chaser ? Interested to find out :)

Good Question :)

When Intel builds an OEM CPU for HP, Dell, SuperMicro, etc they want to go about it in a way where they can make the manufacturer happy in terms of choosing Intel as their choice of CPU. In other words, they want to create a well balanced chip that is both competitive in the marketplace but also very flexible and able to perform well at a number of different tasks across the board of pc computing. In other words, OEM Intel CPUs are designed to wear many hats -- because they will eventually be making their way into very diverse server environments around the world, for example, it could be as one little server in a small business or deployed across a vast expanse of huge data centers. This means they need to have pretty good IPC and single core performance as well as plenty of brute strength for more demanding tasks that can take advantage of lots of cores or even all cores across both CPUs. In other words, the chip needs to strike an excellent balance between both single threaded workload performance and high thread count performance AND must do it with very good voltage efficiency and thermal envelope. That "balance" is what I am after when I purchase OEM chips over their retail counterpart. I am exploiting that design spec when I go out and hunt down a superior OEM chips to use in one of my projects.

Typically its one or the other in the retail market, as I am sure you are aware. Despite the inherent challenges Intel knows what they are doing when they sit down to design the ideal, OEM processor that will be used by major brand computer manufacturers. Also keep in mind processor voltage efficiency and TDP--- Intel wants a chip that is going to be very voltage efficient for a number of reasons, as this OEM chip will eventually be making it's way into diverse hardware and diverse system environments all around the world. Some advantages of a more voltage efficient chip include: lower TDP, lower electrical usage, lower electric cost and lower electrical consumption, better thermals, cooler running systems, better thermal margins, etc. Also, by virtue of the fact the chip uses less power at the limit, you are assured some margin of thermal protection perhaps over some of the high end 130 w or 150 w and above "retail" chips. So the "OEM" trifecta I'm describing here is not something you really see struck as a balance very often in the retail headspace. Retails chips typically don't need to strike much of a balance between all three, you usually target one or the other, or two at the most, and then you pick the CPU that suites your workload, spec out an appropriate cooling system for it based on clock speed, TDP and thermal performance.

In the case of Intel, they intentionally go about creating OEM CPUs with all three of these aspects in mind, as typically, the OEM chips they produce will offer a much better balance between per core performance, thermal performance and multi-threaded power (and in some cases, more aggressive turboing than their retail counterparts as well).

For example, Lets take a closer look at the Xeon E5 2673 v2 chip for a moment (which is OEM only and never released as a retail chip-- that's why you have to go to China to get them, because China recycles all our old servers, guts them and resells what they can back on the used parts internet market) for a moment so you can see some of the readily apparent differences between OEM and retail processors. By the time I am finished here there should be no doubt in your mind that OEM, in many situations, is a much better call than it's retail counterpart.

As I mentioned above, I have two E5 2673 (OEM only) Xeons in one of my HP z820 workstations. This is an 8 core / 16 thread chip that has a base speed of 3.3GHz. It also has the highly sought after 4.0GHz single core turbo speed, making it a very attractive choice if you are into numbers like that. One place above it on the list(see snip below), you will see it's "retail" equivalent, the E5 2667 v2, which has an identical # of cores, identical turbo specs and exactly the same clock speeds, yet comes into the game with a substantially higher TDP of 130w versus 110w for the OEM chip. Moreover, if you look at the fastest and highest performing Xeon 8 core chip available in the E5 2600 series family, (of which there are a total of three 8C/16T CPUs, all highlighted below ---- you can really see how the OEM 2673 v2 is the optimal choice, and in this case, even preferable to Intel's top shelf premium piece on the retail side, E5 2687W v2, which was at the time, Intel's highest spec'd eight core Xeon processor available on the market. The 2687W v2 has a base speed of 3.4GHz and the same single core turbo of 4.00Ghz, yielding a massive 150w TDP vortex of heat and metal melting destruction in its wake. this chip was intended for those who did not want to compromise and the chip offered the ultimate in class performance. Best chip in it's class, hands down. Given that the base speed of an OEM E5 2673 chip is 3.3GHz, and the base speed of the 2687w is 3.4GHz, we can quickly confirm that the mighty 2687W is, in fact, king kong when it comes to peak base clock in this family. Except that's not the whole story.

Both chips have identical turbo specs. Meaning --- if cooling is sufficient, and in most cases it is, you can ignore the 3.3ghz vs 3.4ghz stock base speed difference, as they will both run at an all core turbo base speed of 3.6GHz and they will both turbo to the identical 4.0GHz mark on a single core)… In other words, I am getting identical, equivalent, top notch performance from my OEM 2673 CPU over it's retail counterpart (either the 130w 2667 or the 150w 2687w). Factor that into something like a dual socket z820 workstation, and you have quite a powerhouse rig that also happens to run surprisingly cool, for a total of 16 cores and 32 threads, 50MB L3 cache and 4.0GHz turbo. In other words, I am getting best in class performance from my OEM chips and I'm doing it while using 80 watts less than its "retail" counterpart. Its really a no brainer to go OEM, but the drawback is that sometimes OEM CPUs can be much more difficult to find (case in point).

For two OEM 2673 chips, my TDP is 220w
or
300w for two 2687w processors (retail)
or
260w for the 2667 processors (retail)

Intel Xeon E5 2600 Series family (with 8 core chips highlighted in yellow) (Not a complete list, but has most of the significant chips - courtesy of CPU world)
1595700571575.png


Due to the rarity of some of these these OEM chips, I'm actually in first place over on HWBot for running dual E5-2673 processors in a single rig. Of course I don't have much competition, but still Im going to bring it up :)



 

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System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
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Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
Display(s) Acer 23" 75Hz Gaming monitors 1080P x2
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Mouse gaming mouse
Keyboard Dell
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I did the same thing with my other HP z820 system. Dual socket, 64gb eight channel memory kit, MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X GPU, SSD x2 raid 0, etc. This time I favored core count over peak clocks, but still went with OEM Xeon processors for obvious reasons (more on that below). Also note, I was able to get the #1 score for CPUz freq on hwbot.com again, due to the rarity of these processors in a dual socket configuration...





The OEM only, 12 core / 24 thread Xeon E5 2696 v2 chip is all around Intel's most powerful processor in the entire 2600 v2 series family, retail or OEM.

-12 Cores
-24 Threads
-3.1GHz base (all turbo base)
-3.5GHz turbo (single core boost)

Essentially, the 12 core 2697 v2 is more or less its equivalent retail counterpart. The all core max turbo speed of the 2696 v2 is 100MHz faster than the E5 2697 v2 (3.4 vs 3.5), making the OEM Xeon E5 2696 v2 a more desirable chip.

And the OEM E5 2696 v2 comes in at 120w TDP versus 130w for the retail 2697 v2. Yes, that's a lower TDP for the OEM chip despite the fact that it has a higher all core turbo boost of 3.5GHz (vs 3.4 for the retail chip).

Turbo Ratio Limits:
35x (1c), 34x (2c), 33x (3c), 32x (4c), 31x (5-12c)
 
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Yes I read you loud and clear.

Matter of fact I have 4 new monitors at home. Just have to go back and get them.

Unfortunatly they are all Acer but the actual quality of the screens is drastically improved and much higher than that other one I listed earlier. These are decent gaming level monitors with 75 hz refresh rate.
Nice desk!
 
Joined
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Location
Upstate NY
System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
Processor Twin Intel Xeon E5 2673 v2 OEM processors (thats a total of 16C/32T)
Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
Display(s) Acer 23" 75Hz Gaming monitors 1080P x2
Case Brushed Aluminium
Audio Device(s) Integrated (5.1)
Power Supply HP 1125W Stock PSU
Mouse gaming mouse
Keyboard Dell
Software Windows 10 Pro
Nice desk!

Thank you. It really does have a lot of significance and its use spans the entire history of my overclocking/computer hobby/passion (since rig #1), as something I've had around since day one. It was my grandfather's desk at Plattsburgh Air Force Base in Upstate NY where he was the base civil engineer, colonel, and pilot in the strategic air command division, flying B-47s and nuclear bombs post WWII. In the late 80s, I inherited it from him along with a wooden propeller from a 1941 Avro Anson, which I happen to be in the process of reconditioning right now. It's going to look really good when it's done. It's a really beautiful piece of aviation history.

This was my setup before I upgraded to four monitors (as already pictured earlier in the thread.) In some cases I like the simple, dual screen setup I had before more for certain games and general web browsing.



At some point I am going to get a new key made for the center drawer. Other than that, it's a tank. I keep the cabinets in order and the slides well greased. A well oiled machine, just like all my computers :)
 
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System Name HP Z820
Processor Intel Xeon 2667 V2 8 Core X 2
Motherboard HP Dual Xeon Version 2
Cooling HP Water Cooling
Memory 256GB DDR3 1866MHZ ECC DIMM
Video Card(s) Three GTX 1080Ti
Storage 1TB SSD BOOT, 256 Turbo SSD Cache, 4TB HD, 3TB HD, 2TB HD, several External USB HD
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Case Z820
Audio Device(s) Default HP audio card
Power Supply HP Z820 1400 Watt
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Software Adobe Cloud, Cinema 4D, Nuke, FL Studio, Unreal, Bridge, Daz Studio
I've been using the Z820 for a couple of years now and really love this workstation. The performance to cost ratio is amazing and I'm also in love with the simple design and build quality. I've begun to work on a second Z820 with the same specs for a render only machine.

If some of you are looking to install three GPUs in the Z820 I have created a page that outlines how to go about this process, and the pros and cons. https://www.facebook.com/pg/daviddavisart/photos/?tab=album&album_id=2324347777600160
 
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System Name HP Z820
Processor Intel Xeon 2667 V2 8 Core X 2
Motherboard HP Dual Xeon Version 2
Cooling HP Water Cooling
Memory 256GB DDR3 1866MHZ ECC DIMM
Video Card(s) Three GTX 1080Ti
Storage 1TB SSD BOOT, 256 Turbo SSD Cache, 4TB HD, 3TB HD, 2TB HD, several External USB HD
Display(s) Three surround Dell 27" 2550x1450
Case Z820
Audio Device(s) Default HP audio card
Power Supply HP Z820 1400 Watt
Mouse Steel Series
Keyboard Apple
Software Adobe Cloud, Cinema 4D, Nuke, FL Studio, Unreal, Bridge, Daz Studio
Well I did it again! I simply cannot escape from the clutches of eBay, but who doesn't like new hardware, right?

Having initially ordered a Dell PowerEdge 710, news was broken to me that it was not greatest machine to mod, high noise, not a great "home" computer. And as luck would have it, there was a two day delay in shipping the server, so I worked with owner and he was gracious enough to cancel the order and refund me the money.

In any event, this new machine should provide many hours of enjoyment and fun as I equip it with all of the high performance hardware I can get my hands on. This is the HP z820, which still seems to have pretty good bang for the buck but yet not over the top expensive. This is a professional grade workstation that originally retailed for about $2300 dollars (and went up from there) when it first hit the market. It supports dual Xeon CPUs (e5 2600 series CPUs) and a whopping 512GB of DDR3 memory.

Taken from HP's website:


The HP Z820 has 16 DIMM Slots supporting DDR3 ECC Memory.
The first generation Z820 using the Xeon Sandy-Bridge processor supports up to 128GB of 1333MHz memory.
The second generation Z820 using the Xeon Ivy-Bridge processor supports up to 512GB of 1866MHz memory.

This machine supports QUAD CHANNEL MEMORY

Though I am pretty sure I have a second gen unit, we wont know until it arrives. The plan is to maximize system performance across the board. I will be running 4 SSDs in a raid 0 configuration and upgrading to at least 64GB of DDR3 1600MHz RAM.

The Xeon E5-2673 v2 8 core 16 thread 3.3GHz CPU was chosen for a few reasons. First, I could have gone higher core count, but the trade off is clock speed, and since I'm intending to use this for benchmarking, I favored the higher clocked CPUs (plus I naturally favor per core performance over core count). Second, the E5 - 2673 v2 turbos to the magic number of 4000 MHz, So it is a beast of a CPU, and with two of them, plus hyperthreading, we are looking at serious levels of performance and very powerful number crunching machine here. Another thing, the E5 - 2673 v2 has a TDP of 110W, whereas virtually every CPU above it is either 115w, 130w or 150w, and these require the larger PSU and better cooling. So a good blend of performance and price.

I am building this computer to compete with AMD's 3950X or at least that's the standard to which it will be measured. Both have 16 cores and 32 threads in total. The 3950X will probably stomp on it but nevertheless it should be an interesting comparison.

That's not bad for under $300. But the processors were $180 each, so it's starting to add up. Still, 16 cores and 32 threads for that price is hard to beat.

View attachment 148034
Great build. The 2667 V2 is the fastest XEON from my understanding, hence the obligatory water cooling and the higher power rating of 130 watts. I would recommend installing 1866Mhz DDR3 RAM. The 1866Mhz is the fastest DDR3 available, so if looking to make the fastest Z820 possible, then go for that.
 
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System Name HP Z820
Processor Intel Xeon 2667 V2 8 Core X 2
Motherboard HP Dual Xeon Version 2
Cooling HP Water Cooling
Memory 256GB DDR3 1866MHZ ECC DIMM
Video Card(s) Three GTX 1080Ti
Storage 1TB SSD BOOT, 256 Turbo SSD Cache, 4TB HD, 3TB HD, 2TB HD, several External USB HD
Display(s) Three surround Dell 27" 2550x1450
Case Z820
Audio Device(s) Default HP audio card
Power Supply HP Z820 1400 Watt
Mouse Steel Series
Keyboard Apple
Software Adobe Cloud, Cinema 4D, Nuke, FL Studio, Unreal, Bridge, Daz Studio
If you are interested in learning more about this particular rig, here is a brief, informative synopsis I found on youtube. Definitely an exceptional piece of hardware.


So I can rest easy knowing my incoming z820 workstation is definitely the later, more recent, Gen II revision, which means I will have no issues at all running the e5-2673 v2 processors. Just to note, Gen I z820s only support up to a maximum of 1333MHz RAM and will NOT work with the Xeon 2600 v2 CPUs. You can identify which version you have by going into the BIOS and checking the boot block date:

View attachment 148103

Gen I systems:
Will have a Boot Block Date of 12/28/2011

Gen II systems:

Will have a Boot Block Date of 03/06/2013

If you are shopping for one of these rigs it's generally a good idea to find the Gen II revision, that way you can run the E5 2600 v2 series of CPUs, offering higher clocks and better performance. The high end z820s workstation come stock with liquid cooling systems for both CPUs.


Pleasantly surprised to see that my rig still has the original OEM protection film, that's always a good thing :)
Stay tuned folks. The processors are coming from China so let's hope they aren't contaminated with the coronavirus. lol.
That being said the arrival date of the new processors is likely sometime in late March. But expect single CPU benchmark results, pictures and updates when the rig arrives.
We will also take inventory of all the hardware and associated components. The z820 has incredible expandability. The next thing I need to do is start researching what type of RAM I want to use in this thing.

View attachment 148108
You ABSOLUTELY want to go for the Version 2.0 Motherboard and Version 2.0 Xeons. There is no reason to buy a Gen I Z820, unless it is free, as the Version 2.0 is extremely cheap to begin with and carries several advances that make it competitive with current day workstations.
 
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Great build. The 2667 V2 is the fastest XEON from my understanding, hence the obligatory water cooling and the higher power rating of 130 watts. I would recommend installing 1866Mhz DDR3 RAM. The 1866Mhz is the fastest DDR3 available, so if looking to make the fastest Z820 possible, then go for that.
not necessary. mine are cooked by a simple arctic freezer 33, and temps in full load are always under 70°
 
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System Name HP Z820
Processor Intel Xeon 2667 V2 8 Core X 2
Motherboard HP Dual Xeon Version 2
Cooling HP Water Cooling
Memory 256GB DDR3 1866MHZ ECC DIMM
Video Card(s) Three GTX 1080Ti
Storage 1TB SSD BOOT, 256 Turbo SSD Cache, 4TB HD, 3TB HD, 2TB HD, several External USB HD
Display(s) Three surround Dell 27" 2550x1450
Case Z820
Audio Device(s) Default HP audio card
Power Supply HP Z820 1400 Watt
Mouse Steel Series
Keyboard Apple
Software Adobe Cloud, Cinema 4D, Nuke, FL Studio, Unreal, Bridge, Daz Studio
arctic freezer 33
The Arctic Freezer 33 looks like a great cooler, very nice. I would prefer to go with non-water cooling where possible, as water cooling will eventually get dirty and fail.
 
Joined
Feb 22, 2019
Messages
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The Arctic Freezer 33 looks like a great cooler, very nice. I would prefer to go with non-water cooling where possible, as water cooling will eventually get dirty and fail.

i prefer air cooling to liquid for the same reasons (and it's also simpler). by the way I like a lot freezer 33; they are inexpensive (around 30 euros) and have a very solid mounting system
 

Woutch

New Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2020
Messages
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Hi @storm-chaser

Read this thread carefully. I'm very intressted in your findings. I to have a Z820 (v2). This is my main plex server running on unraid at the moment. It is a dual E5-2650 (v1) with 32GB ECC RAM. I'm upgrading this so I can host my own "cloud" game service using moonlight. I have a proof of concept running using an old K2000 quadro card passedtrough to the VM, as well as an pcie SSD. This works but is underperforming, mainly for the GPU, but I have an RTX2080 incomming. The main thing that needs upgrading is the CPU then and read some good info here.

I looked after the E5-2673 V2 online and found it at a price around 150€ (177 USD) in China. Is this a correct price? Or did you find it at a better value? And where if I may ask?

I'm running the 1250W power supply, so no problem for the RTX2080. But I only have the regular air coolers. Sound is not an Issue, the workstation lives in my cool basement ;-)

EDIT: An alternative is the E5 2680 v2, it is only slower 2.8GH -> 3.6 GHZ but 10 cores and can find it for half the price. But for gaming I think the 2673 seems a better fit. And I want to stay amay from the 130-150 watt TPD's.

Thanks for any info!
Best regards,
Wouter
 
Last edited:
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
1,150 (0.47/day)
Location
Upstate NY
System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
Processor Twin Intel Xeon E5 2673 v2 OEM processors (thats a total of 16C/32T)
Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
Display(s) Acer 23" 75Hz Gaming monitors 1080P x2
Case Brushed Aluminium
Audio Device(s) Integrated (5.1)
Power Supply HP 1125W Stock PSU
Mouse gaming mouse
Keyboard Dell
Software Windows 10 Pro
Great build. The 2667 V2 is the fastest XEON from my understanding, hence the obligatory water cooling and the higher power rating of 130 watts. I would recommend installing 1866Mhz DDR3 RAM. The 1866Mhz is the fastest DDR3 available, so if looking to make the fastest Z820 possible, then go for that.
The 2667 v2 is a power house chip with single core turbo of 4.0GHz. There are three eight core chips with nearly identical specs in the 2600 series line. The E5 2667 v2 coming in at 130 watts, the E5 2687w v2, at 150w and the OEM only E5 2673 v2, which also has a 4.0GHz turbo, identical core count but comes in at a much lower 110W TDP. Again the OEM chips seem to be the better buy in this case. My 2673 v2 performs identically in benchmarks when compared with both of these higher wattage chips.
 
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
1,150 (0.47/day)
Location
Upstate NY
System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
Processor Twin Intel Xeon E5 2673 v2 OEM processors (thats a total of 16C/32T)
Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
Display(s) Acer 23" 75Hz Gaming monitors 1080P x2
Case Brushed Aluminium
Audio Device(s) Integrated (5.1)
Power Supply HP 1125W Stock PSU
Mouse gaming mouse
Keyboard Dell
Software Windows 10 Pro
Hi @storm-chaser

Read this thread carefully. I'm very intressted in your findings. I to have a Z820 (v2). This is my main plex server running on unraid at the moment. It is a dual E5-2650 (v1) with 32GB ECC RAM. I'm upgrading this so I can host my own "cloud" game service using moonlight. I have a proof of concept running using an old K2000 quadro card passedtrough to the VM, as well as an pcie SSD. This works but is underperforming, mainly for the GPU, but I have an RTX2080 incomming. The main thing that needs upgrading is the CPU then and read some good info here.

I looked after the E5-2673 V2 online and found it at a price around 150€ (177 USD) in China. Is this a correct price? Or did you find it at a better value? And where if I may ask?

I'm running the 1250W power supply, so no problem for the RTX2080. But I only have the regular air coolers. Sound is not an Issue, the workstation lives in my cool basement ;-)

EDIT: An alternative is the E5 2680 v2, it is only slower 2.8GH -> 3.6 GHZ but 10 cores and can find it for half the price. But for gaming I think the 2673 seems a better fit. And I want to stay amay from the 130-150 watt TPD's.

Thanks for any info!
Best regards,
Wouter
Good to hear about your own z820 project. I'm sure it will be suited for the task at hand. Regarding CPU choice, the 2673 v2 is probably the best route to go down for gaming at least... but that 10 core sounds interesting as well.. what is the highest all core turbo speed it will run? The z820 has multiple GPU supply lines but they are only six pinners, so you may need to order a couple 6 to 8 pin GPU adapters. That's what I had to do for my 5700XT. Another option would be two E5 2696 v2 chips, which are available from the US market and appear to be going for around $150 a pop on ebay.

CPU Price for your 2673 v2 sounds about right at just under $200 a pop and yes they only seem to be coming from China at the moment (absolutely nothing on the US market, its a pretty rare chip).
 
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
1,150 (0.47/day)
Location
Upstate NY
System Name Dual Socket HP z820 Workstation
Processor Twin Intel Xeon E5 2673 v2 OEM processors (thats a total of 16C/32T)
Motherboard HP Dual Socket Motherboard
Cooling Stock HP liquid cooling
Memory 64GB Registered ECC memory kit (octal channel memory on this rig)
Video Card(s) MSI RX 5700 XT Gaming X 8GB
Storage 2 x 512GB SSD in raid 0
Display(s) Acer 23" 75Hz Gaming monitors 1080P x2
Case Brushed Aluminium
Audio Device(s) Integrated (5.1)
Power Supply HP 1125W Stock PSU
Mouse gaming mouse
Keyboard Dell
Software Windows 10 Pro
hmm i would buy the E5-2673 v2 for my HP 420, but 60 bucks a bit to much for old cpu, considering i only paid 22 dollars for my 2630 v2.
Where are you finding the 2673 v2 for $60???
 
Joined
Jun 25, 2008
Messages
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System Name Dell Workstation t5810
Processor Xeon CPU's E5-2683 v4 Broadwell-E Technology
Motherboard Broadwell-E X99
Cooling Default fan System Level 3
Memory 48GB DDR4
Video Card(s) Radeon Pro VII 16GB
Storage 2 Internal SSD, 6 External HDD
Display(s) Dell 27 Inch Monitor
Case Dell Precision 5810
Audio Device(s) RealTek High Definition
Power Supply 825 Watts PSU
Mouse Soundless Black Quiet Mouse
Keyboard Dell Black
Software Windows Pro 10 x64
Where are you finding the 2673 v2 for $60???

Sorry for the late reply, it was on Ebay months ago, but i bought a Xeon 2678 v3 for 83 bucks for the computer i am using now, and back then i bought a 2650 v2 for 50 bucks for my second computer. I get everything from ebay, its the best place for computer stuff.
 
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