The HP N36L is an "ultra mini server" introduced Sep 2010.

Specifications

Observations

Does not include a optical disc drive SATA cable

Uses Torx screws (size?) for hard disks, optical disc drive

Adjacent the x1 PCIe slot is a x4 PCIe slot (the "PCIe holder"); wouldn't be usable without a modified card.

Reviews

Silent PC Review has a forum thread on the introduction of the HP N36L.

People who have one

Amrit has one.

My review

Low-power Linux systems are popular with enthusiasts everywhere. From the Linksys NSLU2 (thoughtfully also known as "the slug"), and the various Marvell SheevaPlug devices, there isn't a shortage of options. With all of them, however, you need to make compromises—be it having to deal with ARM's tics, lack of I/O expansion, bad performance, or lackadaisical manufacturers.

If you're willing to compromise on: size, but still be much smaller than your average PC; power, but also consume less power than your average PC; performance, but still run circles around an ARM-based device—then the Hewlett-Packard ProLiant N36L is something to look at. Introduced September 2010, (good) reviews and photos of this system are few. In this article, I review the hardware aspects of the N36L, while in another, I review its software aspects [coming soon].

Internals

The N36L is powered by an x86-based AMD Athlon II Neo processor running at 1.3 GHz intended for low-power systems like netbooks. While it has a slower clockspeed, this AMD CPU typically benchmarks faster than Intel's Atom 1.6 GHz CPU. For the enterprise crowd, the Athlon II Neo is a 64-bit processor and supports hardware-accelerated virtualization and nested paging. This CPU is ideal for partitioning lightly-used services into lightweight VMs. With two DDR3 DIMM slots, the N36L can accommodate up to 8 GiB of RAM.

Graphics is provided by an integrated ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4200 (which also supports GPGPU/OpenCL via proprietary drivers), and the Gigabit NIC is a Broadcom NetXtreme BCM5723.

The mainboard provides a respectable amount of expansion. It has two PCIe slots, an x16 (you could easily use a discrete graphics card, though you'd have to be picky about dimensions) and an x1. Adjacent the x1 slot is an x4 slot, supposedly for use with HP's proprietary management card. You could probably hack a conventional x4 card into the slot, but I rather HP have made the x4 slot usable and used the x1 slot for it's proprietary add-ons (does a management card really need more than PCIe x1?).

The chassis' disk racks connect via a mini-SAS connector. There's one internal SATA connector for the 5.25" bay, but the system's eSATA connector faces outward so your dreams of putting six drives in this tiny system are dashed.

There's an internal USB 2.0 port, a feature commonplace on servers. It makes running an OS off a USB flash drive that much easier—sequestered internally, such a drive won't accidentally get knocked off.

Externals

The frontside of the N36L is… "server-like", whatever that means. Along the top are LED indicators for disk and network activity, as well as the system's backlit power button. There are four USB 2.0 ports along the right side, and an HP logo that glows blue when the system is on. The chassis door is metal (not plastic!), and has a lock.

The backside of the N36L is austere. The only ports: two USB 2.0 ports, one D-sub VGA port, a Gigabit Ethernet port, and one eSATA port. There's a security Kensington lock slot, as well as an "expander slot" for HP's proprietary management card. The power supply, fortunately, is integrated (power bricks are a pet peeve of mine), and uses a standard AC power cord.

There are two fans: a 120 mm fan for the system's main cooling, and a 40 mm fan internal to the PSU. Fortunately, both are quiet; HP rates the system at 21 dB. There are no top or side vents; air is drawn in through the front and exhausted out the back.

Unlike other PCs, the N36L does not use Phillips-head screws for the user-accessible bits. Two sizes of Torx screws are used (I'm unsure of the size), and HP was pleasant enough to include a Torx screwdriver that snaps into the inside of the machine's front door. Screws for hard disks and the optical disk drive are also screwed into convenient holes in the front door—no little baggies of screws to lose here! There is a single thumbscrew on the top-back to remove the top cover, and two thumbscrews hold the motherboard plate in place.

Other than the handle mechanism which has a metal spring, the N36L's disk caddies are simple plastic affairs. The plastic does not appear to be particularly high quality, but since the only purpose of the things is to hold disks (and not face the environment), it probably good enough.

How much power does the N36L consume? Using my Kill-a-Watt, I measured 60 W on startup, and settled down to 45 W or so after booting and idling. This unfortunately is a lot more than I'd have liked, but this was with four spinning disks.

Cons

I'm not trying to be pessimist by not including a Pros list, but honestly, if you need one at this point you probably don't need this machine. However, there are some cons I found annoying:

Conclusion

Why did I get an N36L? The short list:

If you're looking for more photos, see my HP ProLiant N36L set on Flickr. And, if you liked this article and are looking to buy right now, consider buying through Amazon (affiliate link).