Matthew,
I want to thank you for this system build! It is the modern version SR-71 of computers.
Previously, I was running a single Intel Xeon E3-1225 V3 (1150 series) four core system and the CPU load stayed pegged at 97% with 11 HD cameras feeding to it. If more than 2 cameras needed to record, the CPU would hit 100% and I’d get all sorts of malfunctions (video clipping, simply no video recorded, a frozen framed recording, or a black screen recording).
This new system is the quintessential hot-rod:
ASUS Z10PE-D8 WS Motherboard
Dual - Intel Xeon (2011 -3) E5-2678 V3 CPU’s (12 Cores each – 24 Threads each = 24 Cores @2.5GHz nominal, 3.1 Ghz Turbo, with 48 threads total)
32 GB Samsung 2133 ECC DDR4 Ram
Samsung 256 GB M.2 SSD for the OS and Blue Iris Software
LSI 9211 8i Sas/Raid Controller – Controlling 4x2TB WD Black Drives in RAID-10 (for video storage)
ASUS GeForce GTX 970 w/4GB DDR5
Windows 10 Pro – 64 bit.
Blue Iris 4.
The system and OS (with Blue Iris software) was transferred intact on the M.2 drive, having retained the same RAID array, video card and case from the previous version.
The New system handles all 11 HD cameras without breaking a sweat. The max CPU load in the daytime, full color with 7 cameras monitoring and 4 cameras recording at the same time is 13% (previously unable to record 4). The typical idle with nothing being recorded is 7-9% CPU load. I’m going to test to see what happens with all 11 recording at the same time – something I normally see start happening when a nasty storm comes through, and an event that would bring the entire system to a crash and reboot.
This new system was built with a $2500 budget. The CPU’s were new old stock, Intel Xeons made specifically for IBM and Dell servers. Research and a lengthy discussion with ASUS Tech Support revealed that the Z10PE-D8 WS motherboard does indeed support these system specific CPU’s. Similar CPU’s cost $2400 each, however these CPU’s are being sold at a significantly discounted price because most motherboard manufacturers do not have BIOS revisions that support these CPU’s. In fact, the ASUS QVL for this motherboard does not list this specific CPU. So it’s a trade secret. One that I’m sharing with you both – Ken at Blue Iris, and Matthew at Bradley Electronics. Please share this discovery with anyone looking to build an affordable super workstation.
Thanking you again for the system build,
Don Francis
PS – I’m now looking for a local expert on Blue Iris software that I can hire to come over here and tweak this software to take advantage of this system’s potential. Please give me names and or phone numbers if either of you know of someone local to North East Georgia with this skillset.
I want to thank you for this system build! It is the modern version SR-71 of computers.
Previously, I was running a single Intel Xeon E3-1225 V3 (1150 series) four core system and the CPU load stayed pegged at 97% with 11 HD cameras feeding to it. If more than 2 cameras needed to record, the CPU would hit 100% and I’d get all sorts of malfunctions (video clipping, simply no video recorded, a frozen framed recording, or a black screen recording).
This new system is the quintessential hot-rod:
ASUS Z10PE-D8 WS Motherboard
Dual - Intel Xeon (2011 -3) E5-2678 V3 CPU’s (12 Cores each – 24 Threads each = 24 Cores @2.5GHz nominal, 3.1 Ghz Turbo, with 48 threads total)
32 GB Samsung 2133 ECC DDR4 Ram
Samsung 256 GB M.2 SSD for the OS and Blue Iris Software
LSI 9211 8i Sas/Raid Controller – Controlling 4x2TB WD Black Drives in RAID-10 (for video storage)
ASUS GeForce GTX 970 w/4GB DDR5
Windows 10 Pro – 64 bit.
Blue Iris 4.
The system and OS (with Blue Iris software) was transferred intact on the M.2 drive, having retained the same RAID array, video card and case from the previous version.
The New system handles all 11 HD cameras without breaking a sweat. The max CPU load in the daytime, full color with 7 cameras monitoring and 4 cameras recording at the same time is 13% (previously unable to record 4). The typical idle with nothing being recorded is 7-9% CPU load. I’m going to test to see what happens with all 11 recording at the same time – something I normally see start happening when a nasty storm comes through, and an event that would bring the entire system to a crash and reboot.
This new system was built with a $2500 budget. The CPU’s were new old stock, Intel Xeons made specifically for IBM and Dell servers. Research and a lengthy discussion with ASUS Tech Support revealed that the Z10PE-D8 WS motherboard does indeed support these system specific CPU’s. Similar CPU’s cost $2400 each, however these CPU’s are being sold at a significantly discounted price because most motherboard manufacturers do not have BIOS revisions that support these CPU’s. In fact, the ASUS QVL for this motherboard does not list this specific CPU. So it’s a trade secret. One that I’m sharing with you both – Ken at Blue Iris, and Matthew at Bradley Electronics. Please share this discovery with anyone looking to build an affordable super workstation.
Thanking you again for the system build,
Don Francis
PS – I’m now looking for a local expert on Blue Iris software that I can hire to come over here and tweak this software to take advantage of this system’s potential. Please give me names and or phone numbers if either of you know of someone local to North East Georgia with this skillset.