
Dell Intel Xeon PowerEdge R440 Silver 4110 Server (Renewed)
Eight Skylake-SP cores at 2.1GHz with ECC memory and dual redundant PSUs deliver data-center-grade reliability at a fraction of new server pricing.
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Overview
Reliable Performance for Demanding Workloads
Introducing the Dell PowerEdge R440, a robust and efficient server designed for a variety of business applications. Equipped with an Intel Xeon Silver 4110 processor, 32GB of RAM, and dual 300GB 15K SAS drives, this renewed server delivers reliable performance and ample storage capacity. With the H330 controller, the PowerEdge R440 is an excellent choice for businesses seeking a dependable and cost-effective solution.
Key Features:
- Intel Xeon Silver 4110 Processor: Provides reliable processing power for various workloads.
- 32GB of RAM: Ensures smooth multitasking and efficient performance.
- Dual 300GB 15K SAS Drives: Offers ample storage capacity with high-speed data access.
- H330 Controller: Enhances data management and storage capabilities.
Detailed Specifications:
- Processor: Intel Xeon Silver 4110 8C 2.1Ghz
- Memory: 32GB RAM
- Storage: 2X 300GB 15K SAS
- Controller: H330
Key Features
2.1Ghz Eight Core Silver 4110 CPU
32GB of ECC DDR4 RAM
2 x Dell 300GB 15K 12Gbps 2.5'' SAS Drives
H330 12Gbps Raid Controller
2x 550W Redundant Power Supplies
Pros & Cons
👍 Pros
- Dual 550W redundant PSUs provide N+1 power redundancy — one supply can fail without server downtime
- ECC DDR4 RAM corrects single-bit memory errors, directly protecting data integrity for databases and VMs
- 15K RPM SAS drives deliver ~1.2GB/s sequential throughput with lower latency than SATA at equivalent capacity
- H330 12Gbps RAID controller offloads RAID parity calculations from the CPU
- Renewed pricing delivers 1U rack-mount Xeon Silver hardware at a significant discount over new
👎 Cons
- Single-socket configuration limits the platform to 8 cores — no upgrade path to a second CPU for this SKU
- 32GB RAM is functional but fills half the DIMM slots, and DDR4 RDIMM expansion adds cost
- 300GB SAS capacity is low by modern standards — storage-heavy workloads will require immediate drive expansion
- Renewed units carry uncertainty around drive health and remaining duty cycle without independent SMART data review
- No NVMe storage option at this spec level — all storage throughput bottlenecks at the SAS backplane