war story: my new off-the-shelf desktop computer

Bob Jonkman bjonkman-w5ExpX8uLjYAvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org
Mon Oct 14 07:02:44 UTC 2013


Hugh Redelmeier wrote:
> The drive bays require proprietary screws.  Even though HP's blurb
> says "Tool-less access for up to three HDDs or SSDs and two ODDs
> provide storage for your digital library and backup. Easily add or
> swap components."  These screws are not available from HP Support
> (they send me to HP Parts) or HP Parts (they send me to HP Support).

On HP cases I've worked on (from the last 10 years) the front of the
case (behind the plastic facing) has four, eight or twelve screws, just
screwed into the metal of the case, not holding anything in place. They
have cylindrical heads with a Torx and slot fitting. They're intended to
put into drives (without holding anything in place), so that the
cylindrical screw heads act as gliders in the slots of the "Tool-less
access" drive bays.

Conveniently, I happen to have an older model on the workbench with the
cover off:

http://sobac.com/owncloud/public.php?service=files&t=24a0458283121372f0880222dcea526b

This model has Phillips screws, so must have been manufactured before HP
became evil (perhaps when they were still called Compaq).

--Bob.



Bob Jonkman <bjonkman-w5ExpX8uLjYAvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org>          Phone: +1-519-669-0388
SOBAC Microcomputer Services             http://sobac.com/sobac/
http://bob.jonkman.ca/blogs/    http://sn.jonkman.ca/bobjonkman/
Software   ---   Office & Business Automation   ---   Consulting
GnuPG Fngrprnt:04F7 742B 8F54 C40A E115 26C2 B912 89B0 D2CC E5EA


On 13-10-14 12:37 AM, D. Hugh Redelmeier wrote:
> My current desktop is just fine.  But it is over 5 years old and 
> I was getting wanderlust.  Then I saw this thread and similar ones: 
>  <http://forums.redflagdeals.com/629-fs-hp-envy-h8-1569-desktop-computer-i7-3770-12gb-ram-2tb-hdd-16gb-ssd-1374552/>
> 
> I bought off ebay.ca, from that seller (SurplusByDesign, a front for
> Staples), an HP Envy 700-019.  It differs a little bit from that
> thread's computer.  Here's mine:
>   <http://www8.hp.com/ca/en/products/desktops/product-detail.html?oid=5368230#!tab=specs>
> 
> - "used" (but not really: film still protected all the plastic
>   surfaces; Win8 not customer-ized)
> 
> - Later-model CPU (Haswell i7-4770) so I get a few obscure goodies 
>   + slightly faster in some cases
>   + better integrated graphics (which I won't use)
>   + Haswell New Instructions
>   + Transactional Synchronization Extensions
> 
> - no SSD (but 16G isn't that large)
> 
> - auction; slightly cheaper
> 
> - later model video card [turned out to be a downgrade]
> 
> All well and good.
> 
> But I had a few surprises, and not good ones.
> 
> The video card (HP OEM AMD Radeon HD 8570 (2 GB DDR3 dedicated)) only
> goes up to 1920x1200.  AMD's specs for this card say 2560x1600, which
> I need for my monitor.  But OEMs can cripple cards.
>   <http://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Desktop-Audio-Video-Monitors/Envy-700-019-s-Radeon-HD-8570-won-t-support-2560x1600/td-p/3000589>
>   <http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?p=35596985&posted=1#post35596985>
>   <http://www.amd.com/US/PRODUCTS/DESKTOP/GRAPHICS/8000/Pages/8570.aspx#2>
> Annoyingly, the HP Radeon HD 7570 in the Envy H8 *does* do 2560x1600.
> 
> Fix: I've replaced the video card with an MSI GeForce GTX 650.
> 
> The drive bays require proprietary screws.  Even though HP's blurb
> says "Tool-less access for up to three HDDs or SSDs and two ODDs
> provide storage for your digital library and backup. Easily add or
> swap components."  These screws are not available from HP Support
> (they send me to HP Parts) or HP Parts (they send me to HP Support).
> The maintenance manual incorrectly describes the drive cage and how to
> mount drives.  I'm not alone:
>   <https://es-es.facebook.com/HP/posts/10152929263390290>
> 
> Fix: In my bucket of screws, accumulated over 30 years, I found four
> screws that would do in a pinch.  They might not have the correct
> threading but I can force them into a 3.5" adapter for a 2.5" SSD.
> 
> My old SSD doesn't work with Haswell.  This is a known problem with
> all first generation SandForce SSD controllers.  Apparently the SSD
> warranty doesn't cover this case (why not?  it seems like a defect).
>   <http://www.ocztechnologyforum.com/forum/showthread.php?111964-Vertex-2-Agility-2-and-Haswell>
> This was not an easy problem to debug but when I went to OCZ's forum, this 
> posting was prominent.
> 
> Fix: I ordered a new SSD.  It should arrive in the coming week
> 
> The chipset (Z87 stepping C1) has a USB bug, fixed in C2.  See Erratum
> 17 "SuperSpeed Device Re-Enumeration" in
> <http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/specification-updates/8-series-chipset-pch-spec-update.pdf>
> Amusingly, the Product Change Notice describes the fix as "Metal
> layers change from C1 to C2 to fix USB SuperSpeed device
> remuneration[sic] erratum."  I want remuneration :-)
> 
> Fix: ignore.  It may never hit me.
> 
> Oh, and I haven't yet figured how to install Linux on a UEFI Secure
> Boot system.  I'm taking the chicken's way out:
> - turn off secure boot
> - install Linux on an SSD so I can select which system to boot by
>   selecting the boot device
> I've not tried this (I'm awaiting the SSD) so I don't know for sure
> that it will work.
> 
> So who knows how many other nits I find when I actually use the
> machine.
> 
> Summary: Lennart is laughing at me for buying an HP desktop.  But my last 
> one worked out quite well.  I still hope that this one will.
> --
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