Hi bcastner (thanks for your many replies) & thanks everyone for responses.
bcastner
"Without offense to you, these were "bargain" boxes intended for the home market."
Actually, that is not the case. Dell has several product lines such as the Inspiron and Dimension which are the consumer level, the Optiplex and Latitude for the corporate level, and high end Precision workstations.
After I spoke with a Dell senior level support person, he acknowledged that 6 of 12 was a large number of failures over a three-year timeframe. He informed me that Dell was aware of this end was doing an analysis to improve the performance of these OptiPlex PC's in the small form factor, such as improving me airflow, which I had suggested to him.
I explained that the drives were Samsung and Seagate 20 GB drives replaced by 40 GB Western Digital drives, which have been more robust so far. The NIC's were on the motherboard as a chipset & connector, so heat most probably was a factor.
I am now telling the users to power down their PC's at night since the overnight ambient room temperature is at least 82 degrees F in Phoenix, Arizona.
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technome could you elaborate - I searched but found general Q's such as compatibilty with other GX series, but this seemed pretty interesting from a former Dell guy:
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beel1956 - could you explain how you came up with this info, sounds interesting, was this a survey?
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felixc - Power supply makes sense, however for drive failures, I don't think so. Heat seems to be the cause of motherboard problems, since one board totally failed, not even beep codes worked. It was in a desk enclosure. I informed the client to get desk fans and use UPS's.
We experienced boot track problems on three drives, data was recoverable on two drives as slave drives, third drive was really dead, nothing recoverable using forensic level recovery. It had a few files, backed up previously.
Best regards, all. Dave