There are two different heat sinks for the Gen 8 Microserver. The most common was shipped with the models that came with G1610T/G2020T (I think the Xeon E3-1220Lv2 as well) processor and is rated for a 35w TDP (Part No. 724983-001). The one that shipped with the i3-3240 SKU is significantly larger and is rated for a 55w TDP (Part No. 832667-001). Often people upgrade the CPU far beyond the 35w TDP of the heat sink they have.
The Gen 8 could be purchased with the PS1810-8G managed switch that has the same form factor as Gen 8 & Gen 10 Microservers so it could stack on top or underneath. It also has a neat feature that allows you to monitor the ILO status of your servers from the switch itself. There is also the HPE PS110 Wireless VPN Router which is also the same form factor but I have never seen one for sale so don’t know much about it.
Another workaround for the booting from the ODD is to connect it to the onboard SATA connection and change settings in BIOS to use AHCI or Legacy mode and using a dedicated raid card (Such as the HP P420) for the rest of the disks. The onboard RAID controller is terrible so chances are you may be already adding a raid card so not a huge loss.
You can add additional drives as there are multiple 3d print designs for adding two additional disks to the side of the PSU. There is a molex connector that you can split off from if you wish. You can also use these 3.5" to 2.5" HDD adapters from HP that fit without issue HP Part No. 2654540-001. Usually cheaper than the 3rd party alternatives.
The coloured door kit is Part No. 722320-B21 and the last time I looked was being sold on Ebay by someone in the united states and and a company in Poland kozak.pl - I have had no success in getting a reply from the Polish company if they ship abroad as I have always wanted to have the different colours. They did have all colours available last time I looked. There is also another door for the Microserver which has never Gen 9 style branding for it that was available on the later models sold.
It is possible to fix the ILO problem by replacing the NAND chip on the motherboard. I don’t have the replacement chip details on hand but I have so far managed to resurrect 3 by replacing the chip using a heat gun. Once i find out what it is I’ll post it. A work around for the issues for the NAND failing is that you can boot into Intelligent Provisioning / Smart Storage Admin by setting up a usb stick with Service Pack for Proliant which has it on it. Only necessary for first time set up as you can access the rest from within the OS.
There are two power supplies as well one is 150W and the other 200W. If I recall correctly the 200W was mostly for the European market.
I think that’s everything for now. If I think of anything else I’ll add on!
There are two different heat sinks for the Gen 8 Microserver. The most common was shipped with the models that came with G1610T/G2020T (I think the Xeon E3-1220Lv2 as well) processor and is rated for a 35w TDP (Part No. 724983-001). The one that shipped with the i3-3240 SKU is significantly larger and is rated for a 55w TDP (Part No. 832667-001). Often people upgrade the CPU far beyond the 35w TDP of the heat sink they have.
The Gen 8 could be purchased with the PS1810-8G managed switch that has the same form factor as Gen 8 & Gen 10 Microservers so it could stack on top or underneath. It also has a neat feature that allows you to monitor the ILO status of your servers from the switch itself. There is also the HPE PS110 Wireless VPN Router which is also the same form factor but I have never seen one for sale so don’t know much about it.
Another workaround for the booting from the ODD is to connect it to the onboard SATA connection and change settings in BIOS to use AHCI or Legacy mode and using a dedicated raid card (Such as the HP P420) for the rest of the disks. The onboard RAID controller is terrible so chances are you may be already adding a raid card so not a huge loss.
You can add additional drives as there are multiple 3d print designs for adding two additional disks to the side of the PSU. There is a molex connector that you can split off from if you wish. You can also use these 3.5" to 2.5" HDD adapters from HP that fit without issue HP Part No. 2654540-001. Usually cheaper than the 3rd party alternatives.
The coloured door kit is Part No. 722320-B21 and the last time I looked was being sold on Ebay by someone in the united states and and a company in Poland kozak.pl - I have had no success in getting a reply from the Polish company if they ship abroad as I have always wanted to have the different colours. They did have all colours available last time I looked. There is also another door for the Microserver which has never Gen 9 style branding for it that was available on the later models sold.
It is possible to fix the ILO problem by replacing the NAND chip on the motherboard. I don’t have the replacement chip details on hand but I have so far managed to resurrect 3 by replacing the chip using a heat gun. Once i find out what it is I’ll post it. A work around for the issues for the NAND failing is that you can boot into Intelligent Provisioning / Smart Storage Admin by setting up a usb stick with Service Pack for Proliant which has it on it. Only necessary for first time set up as you can access the rest from within the OS.
There are two power supplies as well one is 150W and the other 200W. If I recall correctly the 200W was mostly for the European market.
I think that’s everything for now. If I think of anything else I’ll add on!