Multinode servers
Twin servers combine maximum performance with efficient design for a revolution in datacenter Green Computing.
These high density micronode systems support critical applications while reducing Data Center TCO. Due to their shared components, Twin servers improve cost-effectiveness and reliability, while their modular architecture makes it flexible to configure and easy to maintain. Help preserve the environment while extending computing and storage capabilities from previous models to achieve increased performance and power efficiency.

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FatTwin SuperServer SYS-F619P2-FT+ - 8 nodes
Compute Intensive Applications
Data Center
HPC and Enterprise Applications
Root of Trust support
Hyperscale, Hyperconverged22 242.82 € -
FatTwin SuperServer SYS-F629P3-RC1B - 4 nodes
4 Hot-plug System Nodes in 4U
Compute Intensive Applications
Data Center13 540.76 € -
FatTwin SuperServer SYS-F619P2-RC1 - 8 nodes
8 Hot-plug System Nodes in 4U
Compute Intensive Applications
Data Center25 567.95 € -
FatTwin SuperServer SYS-F619P3-FT - 8 nodes
Compute Intensive Applications
Data Center
HPC and Enterprise Applications
Hyperscale, Hyperconverged22 148.82 € -
FatTwin SuperServer SYS-F629P3-RC0B - 4 nodes
4 Hot-plug System Nodes in 4U
Compute Intensive Applications
Data Center12 958.86 € -
FatTwin SuperServer SYS-F619P2-RC0 - 8 nodes
8 Hot-plug System Nodes in 4U
Compute Intensive Applications
Data Center24 399.27 €
Multinode Servers
A multinode server is a computer server that is designed with two or more independent server nodes that share a single enclosure and one or more power supplies. In a multi-node server, power is distributed to all nodes through shared power supplies. Server nodes in a multi-node server are not designed to be hot-swappable. Multi-nodes offer a nice blend of rack server characteristics and blade server advantages. Multi-node systems are similar to blade servers yet offer unique advantages like AMD, 1 CPU versions, and provide a smaller fault domain. The multi-node has a greater potential of supporting a larger stack of future CPUs (with or without liquid cooling.)