Wow..really? I had 600s and I dont think my sales team ever offered me that upgrade option. :(
Thanks for the correction. I miss Coleman. He got me into netapp after my wife and I demanded jobs halfway thru 101/202 training. :) _________________________________Jeff MohlerTech Yahoo, Storage Architect, Principal(831)454-6712TW: @PrincipalYahooYM: Supra89ta
On Wednesday, April 15, 2015 10:37 AM, tmac tmacmd@gmail.com wrote:
Oh...I will kindly correct you there my friend.I was deeply entrenched in 5.2 -> Dos Equis (two beers / two filers)This actually came out on the 600 series first....that shiny chrome bezel Jim Squared (Helfrich/Coleman) had me out to HQ testing before it went to the field. I flew all over the east coast upgrading customers to 5.2 and installing the hardware to make it work.The same Cluster card, if I recall, worked in the 700 series too --tmac Tim McCarthyPrincipal Consultant443-228-TMAC (Google Voice)214-279-3926 (eFAX)
Clustered ONTAP Clustered ONTAP NCDA ID: XK7R3GEKC1QQ2LVD RHCE6 110-107-141 NCSIE ID: C14QPHE21FR4YWD4 Expires: 27 October 2016 Current until Aug 02, 2016 Expires: 29 October 2016
On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 1:29 PM, Jeffrey Mohler jmohler@yahoo-inc.com wrote:
IIRC, the main issue was noise if you used the onboard FCAL port. The summer of hell, 1999.
As a customer and at Netapp, I didnt recall any huge swap efforts there.
The lifetime was bound by the sudden realization that Intel was the future in CPUs, Compaq was quickly killing the DEC chips and long term supply was not in the cards.
Dos Equis was the name for HA Failover which first came on the 700s as well..
_________________________________Jeff MohlerTech Yahoo, Storage Architect, Principal(831)454-6712TW: @PrincipalYahooYM: Supra89ta
On Wednesday, April 15, 2015 10:22 AM, tmac tmacmd@gmail.com wrote:
Jeff....you of all must remember the hardware issue with the F700 series.FoxConn made a significant mistake when fabricating all the 700 series boards. There were a number of conditions that automatically generated a fix-on failure by support.In fact, I think the F700 series was one of the shortest life-cycles I've seen. There were significant promotions to get the F700 platform out of the field... --tmac Tim McCarthyPrincipal Consultant
On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Christian Ortiz cortiz@berkcom.com wrote:
Hello Jeff, The F760 was a work horse back in its day so it should boot right up : ) I would be careful replacing the NVRAM and Motherboard batteries as the plastic housing on these got very brittle over the years. If you have access to compressed air it would be a good idea to try to blow as much of the dust off of the motherboard and fans before booting it back up. Also these F760 power supplies where notorious for the pull handle screws to break off inside the power supplies, would be a good idea to pull the power supplies out and give them a good shake to see if you can hear anything rattling. Good Luck!! ThanksChristian Christian Ortizcortiz@berkcom.com510-644-1599 VOICE X 309510-654-7010 FAX888-812-9040 TOLL-FREE Berkeley Communications Corporation1321 67th StreetEmeryville, CA 94608http://www.berkcom.com%C2%A0%C2%A0%C2%A0From: toasters-bounces@teaparty.net [mailto:toasters-bounces@teaparty.net]On Behalf Of Jeffrey Mohler Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2015 9:39 AM To: toasters@teaparty.net Subject: Firing up an old F760... This could be fun...and old F760 with say, 4 shelves of 36G drives.. Replace the NVRAM battery, check power supplies for leaking capacitor oil...reseat cards and DIMMS...What're the odds it'll work, and any other fire-prevention steps to take? :) -Cheers _________________________________Jeff MohlerTech Yahoo, Storage Architect, Principal(831)454-6712TW: @PrincipalYahooYM: Supra89ta _______________________________________________ Toasters mailing list Toasters@teaparty.net http://www.teaparty.net/mailman/listinfo/toasters