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Warning56k

Warning56k is a tech-focused channel that explores the latest trends, news, and DIY projects in the world of technology. Join us as we navigate the fast-paced world of tech and share our passion for all things networking, homelab, PC and general computer related.

MikroTik 10Gb Switch - Noctua Fan Mod
19:44
Warning56kb

MikroTik 10Gb Switch - Noctua Fan Mod

Running a fanless 10Gbe switch with RJ45 transceivers and want lower temps? Check this out... 👍SUBSCRIBE👍 to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k Affordable 10Gb Networking for the Home! - MikroTik CRS309 - https://youtu.be/BRXFzUut-0o In this video we'll be taking a MikroTik CRS309-1G-8S+ and modding it by adding Noctua fans to it to assist with cooling. A nice feature of the MikroTik CRS309 is that it is a fanless switch which is perfect for most situations in a HomeLab network. What can be bad is if you are using multiple RJ45 SFP+ transceivers, the transceivers can get very hot while the switch CPU stays cool. Typical fiber optic SFP+ transceivers stay cool, but not S+RJ10 transceivers used with copper ethernet cables. 10 gigabit ethernet networking can make your home network much faster, but you need to be aware of the options available. Using 5V Noctua fans NF-A4x10 we'll be able to place them directly on top of the transceivers, reducing the temperature well under their rated temp and possibly extending their life. MikroTik does not recommend running RJ45 transceivers side by side, rather keeping them spaced apart. This unfortunately turns the 8 port SFP+ switch into a 4 port 10Gbe switch. Adding fans will allow using all ports for 10 gigabit RJ45 networking. The 40mm Noctua fans have a rated airflow of 4.83 CFM with a static pressure of 1.78 mm/H2O. They are also very quiet at only 17.9dB. The Noctua fans will be powered from a 5V USB port on a power strip that's plugged into the server rack UPS battery backup, so in case of a power outage the fans will continue to cool the switch.
Affordable 10Gb Networking for the Home! - MikroTik CRS309
13:28
Warning56kb

Affordable 10Gb Networking for the Home! - MikroTik CRS309

Looking for cheap 10Gb networking in your home? Check out the MikroTik CRS309-1G-8S+IN 10 gigabit switch. 👍SUBSCRIBE👍 to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k CRS309 Noctua Fan Mod - Check Out The Temps! - https://youtu.be/ZDTv6NGBhYk CRS309-1G-8S+IN - https://mikrotik.com/product/crs309_1g_8s_in Test Results - https://mikrotik.com/product/crs309_1g_8s_in#fndtn-testresults MikroTik CRS310-1G-5S-4S+IN - https://mikrotik.com/product/crs310_1g_5s_4s_in In this video we'll be breaking down the specifications of the MikroTik CRS309 10 gigabit switch and router. The CRS309 is probably the most affordable 10Gb SFP+ switch and router on the market and is perfect for a homelab network. It uses an ARM 32bit CPU running at 800MHz with 512MB of RAM and 16MB of flash memory. The flash memory holds both MikroTik operating system SwitchOS and RouterOS at the same time, allowing you to switch back and fourth without having to flash the switch to make a change. The switch is passively cooled, so if using single mode or multimode fiber optic you'll never have any heat issues. The switch has eight SFP+ ports, but if using copper ethernet transceivers running at 10Gb speed you're limited to using only four ports due to the heat they generate. Check out my CRS309 Noctua Fan Mod video if you want to run more copper transceivers. MikroTik produces some of the most affordable home networking equipment on the market for small business or a home lab network.
Cheap Homelab Server - HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Review
12:53
Warning56kb

Cheap Homelab Server - HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Review

Looking for an affordable server for a starter homelab? Introducing the HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9. 👍SUBSCRIBE👍 to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Server Internal Walkthrough - https://youtu.be/1b3blATKx_Y Confirmed: HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 works well with VMware ESXi 8 - https://youtu.be/k0Fcqie8UWA HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Server: https://www.hpe.com/psnow/doc/c04834947 HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Server UserGuide: https://support.hpe.com/hpesc/public/docDisplay?docId=c04898522 HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Server - System Manageability: https://support.hpe.com/hpesc/public/docDisplay?docId=emr_na-c05249948 HPE ProLiant DL20 Gen9 Server: Driver & Downloads - https://support.hpe.com/connect/s/product?language=en_US&sp4ts.oid=1008556819&kmpmoid=1008556819&tab=driversAndSoftware#t=DriversandSoftware In this video we'll be breaking down all of the specs for probably the best starter home lab server, the HP DL20 Gen9 server. Well be touching on as many bases as possible to see if this is the right beginner server for your home network. The DL20 Gen9 doesn't come packed with features, but does have the most essential options for most situations. Its CPU options range from Intel Pentium, Core i3 or Xeon E3-1200v5 processors. It accepts DDR4 memory and has an advertised RAM capacity of 64GB, but can actually hold up to 128GB RAM with four 32GB RAM modules. It can come equipped with either two 3.5" hard drive bays or four 2.5" hard drive bays. It supports booting from a PCIe NVMe drive which is very nice! I have a video 'ProLiant DL20 Gen9 with VMware ESXi 8' where I was able to install VMware ESXi 8.0 into the server and still recognized the onboard B140i RAID controller. This server is VERY quiet. It has two 40mm intake fans that blow onto the CPU and a third internal 40mm fan that blows onto the PCIe slots from the center. There is a spot for what appears to be a location for a third intake fan to the left of the two intake fans that would blow directly onto the RAM, but there are no standard fan headers inside the server for a fan to plug into. The stock fan shroud is also blocked off if a third intake fan was added. I've since installed a 40mm Noctua NF-A4x20 FLX fan in the third fan location and had to modify the shroud by cutting out the blocked off portion. I then tapped into a 12V and ground source on the PSU cabling for fan power. Not really needed, but I like having some airflow over the RAM. 0:00 Intro 0:36 DL20 Gen9 Chassis 1:38 Processors 3:23 DDR4 RAM 3:56 CD ROM 4:09 PCIe / Riser / NVMe 4:53 USB Ports 5:26 Video 5:38 BIOS 6:06 Redundant ROM 6:22 iLO / Ethernet 6:56 SD Card 7:16 SATADOM 7:40 RAID / Controller Cards 9:20 SATA Connectors 9:36 Fans 10:08 Fan Noise Test 11:41 Power Supply 11:57 Internal Power 11:34 Outro
The Perfect pfSense HomeLab Firewall - Lenovo M720q Tiny Review
03:52
Warning56kb

The Perfect pfSense HomeLab Firewall - Lenovo M720q Tiny Review

Introducing the Lenovo M720q Tiny, the perfect home network or homelab firewall! 👍SUBSCRIBE👍 to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k ThinkCentre M720q Tiny: https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/p/desktops/thinkcentre/m-series-tiny/thinkcentre-m720q/11tc1mtm72q?orgRef=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.google.com%252F&sortBy=priceDown ThinkCentre M720q Tiny: Drivers & Downloads - https://pcsupport.lenovo.com/us/en/products/desktops-and-all-in-ones/thinkcentre-m-series-desktops/m720q/10t7/downloads Intel ARK: https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark.html In this video we'll be breaking down the Lenovo M720q Tiny and discussing the key points that make it an affordable homelab firewall for pfSense of OPNsense. The M720q has excellent processor support and can run Intel Core i3, i5, i7 or even a Core i9 processor! That allow this tiny PC to have up to 8 cores with 16 threads! The RAM capacity is rated at 32GB spread across two SODIMM slots, but they can actually support up to 64GB of RAM if you use the right type. It has in internal tray for a standard 2.5" SSD hard drive and on the underside can support an internal M.2 NVMe drive! The neatest feature of the Lenovo M720q has to be its internal PCIe 3.0 x16 capable slot located underneath the SSD tray. It's a proprietary PCIe slot and requires a special riser adapter that you can find on Amazon or Ebay. This enables you to run a smaller size GPU or even better a quad gigabit ethernet card, making it a sick home firewall. You can also install a 10 gigabit SFP+ or 10Gbe ethernet card! You just have to make sure the card is small enough to fit inside. You can also find the proper rear shield for the ethernet or SFP+ ports with the PCIe riser kit. 0:00 Intro 0:26 Intel Processors 1:07 DDR4 RAM 1:18 SSD and NVMe Options 1:58 PCIe 3.0 x8 Slot 2:13 PCIe Gigabit Ethernet Card 2:51 Power Supply 3:05 CPU Usage 3:19 Power Usage
Dell PowerEdge R720 Server Complete Walkthrough
27:19
Warning56kb

Dell PowerEdge R720 Server Complete Walkthrough

Looking at buying or just bought a Dell R720 server? You won't want to miss this! SUBSCRIBE to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k R720 IPMI Manual Fan Control Tutorial - https://youtu.be/KamY5zMpXKI Choosing The Best Dell Server For a Homelab - https://youtu.be/QMO5DY7q69g PowerEdge R720 Owners Manual - https://dl.dell.com/topicspdf/poweredge-r720_owners-manual_en-us.pdf PowedEdge R720 Technical Guide - https://dl.dell.com/manuals/all-products/esuprt_ser_stor_net/esuprt_poweredge/poweredge-r720xd_reference-guide_en-us.pdf R720 GPU Enablement Kit - P/N: 490-13616 R720 PCIe x16 Riser - P/N: 330-10282 iDRAC with Lifecycle Controller v. 2.65.65.65 - https://dl.dell.com/FOLDER06110107M/1/iDRAC-with-Lifecycle-Controller_Firmware_0GHF4_WN64_2.65.65.65_A00.EXE In this video we'll be breaking down nearly every single detail of the Dell PowerEdge R720 server. CPU options, RAM, RAID cards, video cards, power consumption, everything. This specific Dell server is already equipped with dual Intel Xeon E5-2695 v2 12 core 24 thread processors running at 2.4GHz, 192GB of DDR3 memory, and is a hypervisor running VMware ESXi 8.0 on a 256GB PCIe NVMe SSD drive. The R720 does not support booting from PCIe NVMe drive, so this one is booting Clover from an internal USB thumb drive that then points to the NVMe to boot ESXi. It also has another Western Digital 1TB NVMe running on another PCIe card. The server is running a few different virtual machine operating systems such as Kali Linux 2022, Ubuntu Server 22, Windows Server 2019, Windows Server 2022, Windows 10, Windows 95 and Windows XP. On Server 2019 is it running as a Plex server for home media such as movies and television shows as well as general network storage. The front drive configuration is six Seagate 8TB HDD in software RAID 10 configuration with two additional 2TB Western Digital drives for general storage. The server fan speed has been manually reduced to lower noise output without a compromising cooling. Check out my video 'R720 IPMI Manual Fan Control Tutorial' for manually setting the fan speed. I have the CPU fans running at 30% and all of the non CPU fans lowered to 16%. Very quiet and cool! Before reducing your fans speeds make sure your server rack cooling is adequate. 0:00 Intro 0:46 Dimensions / Size 1:52 Front 4:19 Interior 5:05 Fans 8:17 Motherboard 8:55 Memory / RAM 10:27 CPUs 15:13 Network Cards 16:16 PCIe Risers / Cards 20:01 RAID Controllers 22:49 Power Supplies 23:35 Power Consumption 25:31 Rear 27:11 Outro
Dell PowerEdge T320 Server to T420 plus Mods!!
36:43
Warning56kb

Dell PowerEdge T320 Server to T420 plus Mods!!

Dell PowerEdge T320 upgrade to T420 with dual Xeon E5-2470 v2 processors and Noctua fans! 👍SUBSCRIBE👍 to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k Manual Fan Control Mod for Dell PowerEdge Servers with IPMI Tool - https://youtu.be/KamY5zMpXKI Choosing The Best Dell Server For a Homelab- https://youtu.be/QMO5DY7q69g Dell T420 Motherboard 2x Xeon E5-2470 v2: https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/75266/intel-xeon-processor-e52470-v2-25m-cache-2-40-ghz.html 2x Noctua NH-D9DX i4 3U CPU Tower Coolers - https://noctua.at/en/nh-d9dx-i4-3u Noctua NT-H2 Thermal Paste: https://noctua.at/en/nt-h2-10g 192GB RAM: DDR3-1600 ECC Registered - D3-64WT124SLW-1AD PC3-12800R - 32GB Sticks Nvidia RTX T600: https://www.nvidia.com/content/dam/en-zz/Solutions/design-visualization/productspage/quadro/quadro-desktop/proviz-print-nvidia-T600-datasheet-us-nvidia-1670029-r5-web.pdf 1TB Western Digital Blue SN570 NVMe Boot Drive: https://www.westerndigital.com/products/internal-drives/wd-blue-sn570-nvme-ssd#WDS100T3B0C Noctua NF-F12 iPPC 3000 PWM HD Exhaust Fan: https://noctua.at/en/nf-f12-industrialppc-3000-pwm Noctua NF-P12 Intake Fan: https://noctua.at/en/nf-p12 Mellanox ConnectX-2 10 GbE SFP+ PCIe Card w/ Noctua NF-A4x10 FLX Fan PERC H310 RAID Noctua NF-A4x10 Cooling Fan: https://i.dell.com/sites/doccontent/shared-content/data-sheets/Documents/dell-perc-h310-spec-sheet.pdf MikroTik RJ45 10GBE Module: https://mikrotik.com/product/s_rj10 USB 3.1 PCIe Card: https://rb.gy/iawh0 32GB USB Internal for Clover Boot: https://t.ly/NmbRl Clover Boot: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Clover Dual 1100W Redundant Power Supply Unit Upgrade Windows 11 Pro In this episode we'll be taking a Dell T320 and upgrade the motherboard using a T420 motherboard for dual Intel Xeon support. This also doubles the RAM capacity from 192GB of DDR3 to 384GB of DDR3. We'll also be upgrading the CPU from a single Xeon E5-2440 to dual Xeon E5-2470 v2 CPUs for a total of 20 cores and 40 threads for tons of virtual machine capability using VMware Workstation. For the video card we're using an Nvidia RTX T600. For additional cooling we'll also be installing 40mm Noctua fans on the RAID card and Mellanox SFP+ 10Gb network card, as well as adding a Noctua 120mm intake fan to a spot that isn't meant to hold a fan to help cool the upper PCIe cards. We'll also be replacing the factory rear case exhaust fan with a Noctual 120mm NF-F12 iPPC 3000 RPM PWM fan to help silence the server. Probably the coolest mod out of all is the heatsink upgrade for the Xeon CPUs. Using dual Noctua NH-D9DX i4 3U CPU tower coolers that have their own individual fans, it allows lowering the rear exhaust fan to make the server whisper quiet! The Noctua CPU coolers also make sure the server will never run hot under any condition, even when loaded 100% with fan speeds on low. All while fitting neatly underneath the factory fan shroud for perfect airflow ducting! 0:00 Intro 2:02 Parts to be added 4:21 Exhaust Fan Removal 4:46 RAM Removal 5:01 PERC H310 RAID Card Removal 6:31 iDRAC7 Removal 6:50 T320 Motherboard Removal 7:25 350W Power supply Removal 8:16 Dual 1100W Redundant Power Supply Install 10:18 Xeon E5-2470 v2 CPU Install 11:56 Thermal Paste Application CPU 1 12:50 Noctua Heatsink Install CPU 1 14:04 Thermal Paste Application CPU 2 14:20 Noctua Heatsink Install CPU 2 15:00 Motherboard Air Duct Test Fit 15:15 T420 Motherboard Install 19:28 Noctua iPPC 3000 RPM Exhaust Fan Install 23:34 iDRAC7 Install 24:04 Dell Dual SD Card Module reader Install 24:26 PERC H310 RAID Card Heatsink Noctua Fan install 26:17 PERC H310 RAID Card Install 27:03 PCIe NMVE Adapter w/Wester Digital Blue 1TB NVMe Install 27:54 Nvidia RTX T600 Video Card Install 28:10 USB 3.1 PCIe Card install 28:33 Mellanox ConnectX-2 10 GbE SFP+ PCIe Card w/ Noctua Fan Install 29:57 Noctua CPU Heatsink Fans Installation 30:58 Noctua Intake Fan installation 31:17 Noctua Fan Headers Connecting 32:52 192 GB RAM Installation 33:22: Motherboard Air Duct Installation 33:54 MikroTik 10GBe SFP+ Module Install 34:47 T420 Watt Consumption 34:58 Xeon E5-2470 v2 Windows 11 Task Manager Threads 35:29 Outro
Dell & HP Server Manual Fan Control - Tutorial
11:51
Warning56kb

Dell & HP Server Manual Fan Control - Tutorial

Manually set the fan speed on Dell PowerEdge & HPE ProLiant servers! Scroll down to view the step by step procedure, list of commands, as well as the list of fan% to hexadecimal conversions. 👍SUBSCRIBE👍 to see more tech videos! → https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS7Q_pcIDNHefwBwuH7FhrQ?sub_confirmation=1 🔷FOLLOW MY SOCIALS🔷 Twitter - https://twitter.com/Warning_56k Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/Warning56k TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@warning56k This tutorial works for Dell 10th, 12th, 13th and 14th Gen PowerEdge servers running iDRAC prior to v3.34.34.34, and most HPE ProLiant servers. ❌❌❌ DISCLAIMER ❌❌❌ By using these commands you consent to sole ownership of the results of usage of any of the listed commands or values. Understand what you're about to do before you do it. Point, read, type, read back what you typed. ❶ Download IPMI Tool from Dell's website... Dell IPMI Tool Download: https://dl.dell.com/FOLDER06447028M/1/ipmitool-setup-1.8.18-dellemc_p001.exe ❷ Install IPMI Tool to C:\ipmitool ❸ Log into iDRAC web interface and under Network enable IPMI. ❹ In Win search bar type "cmd" and right click Command Prompt and 'Run as Administrator'. ❺ Type: cd\ ❻ Type: cd ipmitool ❼ You're now ready to start giving commands... (I recommend opening up Notepad to type out the commands for simple copy/paste into IPMI Command Prompt. Go ahead and copy all of the commands here so you can just copy from a list.) Replace 'ipaddress' with the IP address of your Dell iDRAC or HPE iLO. Replace 'username' and 'password' with your iDRAC or iLO login credentials. It's convenient to have the iDRAC or iLO web interface displaying the fan speeds to verify its actions as you submit the commands. The low refresh rate makes the reported speeds have a slight delay. Executed from Command Prompt= ✅ Enable Manual Fan Control= ipmitool -I lanplus -H ipaddress -U username -P password raw 0x30 0x30 0x01 0x00 ✅ Disable Manual Fan Control= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0x30 0x01 0x01 ✅ 3rd Party PCIe Response State (Fast fan speed when no therm sensors on PCIe card)= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0xce 0x01 0x16 0x05 0x00 0x00 0x00 Result1= ... 00 00 00 (Enabled) Result2= ... 01 00 00 (Disabled) ✅ Enable 3rd Party PCIe Response= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0xce 0x00 0x16 0x05 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x05 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 ✅ Disable 3rd Party PCIe Response= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0xce 0x00 0x16 0x05 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x05 0x00 0x01 0x00 0x00 ✅ Set All Fans (0xff) to % (??) Speed (in Hexadecimal)= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0x30 0x02 0xff 0x?? ✅ Set All Fans (0xff) to 50% (0x32)= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0x30 0x02 0xff 0x32 🚩System fan #'s vary per chassis. Fan1 starts on the left side behind the Dell logo and can go up to 7 fans to the right side behind the Intel badge. The IPMI fan numbers are NOT the same as the Fan# labels on the chassis. Fan1=0x00, Fan2=0x01, Fan3=0x02, Fan4=0x03, Fan5=0x04, ect.🚩 ✅ Set Fan1 (0x00) to 30% (0x1E)= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0x30 0x02 0x00 0x1E ✅ Set Fan2 (0x01) to 30% (0x1E)= ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0x30 0x02 0x01 0x1E ✅ Set Fan3 (0x02) to 30% (0x1E) ipmitool ... raw 0x30 0x30 0x02 0x02 0x1E ☑ Percentages to Hexadecimal & Fan Speed (R720 example) 10% = 0xA 11% = 0xB 12% = 0xC 13% = 0xD 14% = 0xE 15% = 0xF 16% = 0x10 (~3,300 RPM) 17% = 0x11 18% = 0x12 19% = 0x13 20% = 0x14 (~3,900 RPM) 21% = 0x15 (~4,000 RPM) 22% = 0x16 (~4,200 RPM) 23% = 0x17 (~4,300 RPM) 24% = 0x18 (~4,400 RPM) 25% = 0x19 (~4,500 RPM) 26% = 0x1A (~4,700 RPM) 27% = 0x1B (~4,800 RPM) 28% = 0x1C (~5,000 RPM) 29% = 0x1D (~5,100 RPM) 30% = 0x1E (~5,200 RPM) 31% = 0x1F (~5,400 RPM) 32% = 0x20 (~5,500 RPM) 33% = 0x21 (~5,700 RPM) 34% = 0x22 (~5,800 RPM) 35% = 0x23 (~6,000 RPM) 36% = 0x24 (~6,100 RPM) 37% = 0x25 (~6,200 RPM) 38% = 0x26 (~6,300 RPM) 39% = 0x27 (~6,500 RPM) 40% = 0x28 (~6,600 RPM) 41% = 0x29 42% = 0x2A 43% = 0x2B 44% = 0x2C 45% = 0x2D (~7,300 RPM) 46% = 0x2E 47% = 0x2F 48% = 0x30 49% = 0x31 50% = 0x32 (~8,000 RPM) 51% = 0x33 52% = 0x34 53% = 0x35 54% = 0x36 55% = 0x37 56% = 0x38 57% = 0x39 58% = 0x3A 59% = 0x3B 60% = 0x3C (~9,400 RPM) 61% = 0x3D 62% = 0x3E 63% = 0x3F 64% = 0x40 65% = 0x41 66% = 0x42 67% = 0x43 68% = 0x44 69% = 0x45 70% = 0x46 (~10,800 RPM) 71% = 0x47 72% = 0x48 73% = 0x49 74% = 0x4A 75% = 0x4B 76% = 0x4C 77% = 0x4D 78% = 0x4E 79% = 0x4F 80% = 0x50 (~12,100 RPM) 81% = 0x51 82% = 0x52 83% = 0x53 84% = 0x54 85% = 0x55 86% = 0x56 87% = 0x57 88% = 0x58 89% = 0x59 90% = 0x5A (~13,300 RPM) 91% = 0x5B 92% = 0x5C 93% = 0x5D 94% = 0x5E 95% = 0x5F 96% = 0x60 97% = 0x61 98% = 0x62 99% = 0x63 100% = 0x64 (15,000 RPM) ✅ Report Temperatures ipmitool ... sdr type temperature ✅ Report Only Temp, Volt & Fan Sensors= ipmitool ... sdr elist full ✅ Report Power Supply Output ipmitool ... sdr type ‘Power Supply’ ✅ Displays Energy Consumption ipmitool ... delloem powermonitor
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