| Customization: | Available |
|---|---|
| Application: | Enterprise Level |
| Instruction System: | RISC |
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The PowerEdge R250
The PowerEdge R250 server is a 1U server that is great for computation applications. This 15th generation server builds upon the R240. There are a few different chassis options for the PowerEdge R250. We will cover some of differences and similarities of the different chassis options.
There are only two bay count options for the PowerEdge R250 which are 2 Bay LFF and 4 Bay LFF. The 2 Bay LFF only comes in a cabled SAS/SATA drive version. This chassis accepts a total of two 3.5" SAS/SATA drives. The 4 Bay LFF chassis has both a cabled SAS/SATA drive and hot-swap drive SAS/SATA version. This chassis accepts up to four SAS/SATA drives.
The chassis rear is the same across all R620 chassis. The chassis rear has two PCIe slots which are both low-profile. The rear includes a serial connector, VGA port, two RJ45 Ethernet ports, a dedicated RJ45 iDRAC port, a USB 2.0 port, a USB 3.2 Gen 1 port, a system ID button, a CMA jack, and a cabled power supply.
The PowerEdge R250 server has one CPU socket. This socket accepts Intel Xeon E-2300 processors with up to 8 cores. Intel Pentium processors up to 2 cores are also supported.
The PowerEdge R250 supports one cabled power supply. There is not an option to use hot-swap power supplies. There is a total of two power supply options to choose from. The first option is 450W Bronze 100-240 VAC. The second option is 450W Platinum 100-240VAC. Both options are cabled, are 450W, and support a voltage range of 100-240VAC. The only difference is the efficiency rating. Platinum rated power supply is more efficient at high loads when compared to the bronze rated PSU.
The PowerEdge R250 has a variety of storage controllers to pick from. There are both RAID (PERC) and non-RAID options. Both of these types of storage controllers are good options, but the one that is best for you depends on your use case. You can also use a software RAID. Non-RAID adapters can't be used to configure RAID, but they can be used as a boot or data controller. PERC RAID controllers do have the ability to configure RAID. A software RAID does the same thing, but it is limited compared to a hardware RAID.