this post was submitted on 09 May 2026
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I'm currently facing a dilemma. Right now, I have a synology NAS that I use to host my homelab containers (*arr, pi-hole, vaultwarden, Plex, etc).

I am planning to offload as much of that as possible to a dedicated machine, which hopefully will allow me to continue self-hosting even more demanding services (Immich, etc).

I was lucky enough to get a proper server - Supermicro, for free, with 64GB Ram DDR4 and 1TB. However, I plugged it in and that thing is NOISY.

My rack will be in the home office, where I will spend at least 8 hours a day, so I can't afford that level of noise.

What should I do? Should I try to sell the supermicro and buy something else with that money? Should I keep the RAM and SSD (and CPUs?) and build something else with them? Are there any quiet servers I could look into (I am guessing better performance but more expensive), or Should I go the MiniPC route instead (cheaper and smaller, but more limited specs)?

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[–] Alvaro@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (2 children)

It is completely up to your local market and needs, ie for how much you can sell it, what you can buy etc...

The only tips I can give you:

  • Do you REALLY need all of the compute power? Most people don't and you would wast a ton on electricity. This point on it's own is enough to push most to a mini pc. (Immich can run on basically any mini pc)
  • is there absolutely no other place for the server where the noise wouldn't be an issue?
  • look into sound proofing, you could house it in a box lined with acoustic foam with a the airway taking multiple 90° turns to keep airflow while reducing noise.

P.S:

I personally went on an in-between, I have a large tower pc, basically a server but with hardware meant for mostly silent work, so it rarely get's noisier than background.

[–] i_stole_ur_taco@lemmy.ca 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I ended up at the same. Desktop PC with a lotta hard drives in it and big fans that don’t have to spin fast and make a lot of noise.

Bonus points that it’s consumer desktop hardware and not server grade shit so if something needs replacing there’s usually a cheap replacement available.

[–] tal@lemmy.today 3 points 4 days ago

Desktop PC with a lotta hard drives in it and big fans that don’t have to spin fast and make a lot of noise.

I use a USB DAS JBOD enclosure with fans, which is also an option if you have a mini-PC and just want a bunch of space.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCDDGHMJ

This particular enclosure has physical buttons that lock in place so that the power state is restored on power loss, something that (to my surprise) a number of USB DAS enclosures apparently don't do.

[–] njordomir@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

Same, once I got PWM set up right on my fans, my desktop former gaming PC server has been 90% silent. Even when under load, it only kicks up a notch or two. I'm under the roof, so my summer temps will be the real test.