LSI SAS 9211 just killed my server


Nico_S

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Is this just bad luck or do I miss something utterly obvious?

 

Mainboard: ASRock Z370 Extreme4

I installed a (the seller says) new LSI SAS 9211-8i 8-port card into the PCIe slot. The second I turned the machine on, sparks were flying out of the slot / card. Totally in shock - I never experienced something similar before - I pulled out the power cord. Luckily both brand new SSDs that were connected to the card are still working (checked on a Windows machine).  I haven't checked the HDDs that contain the actual data. Hopefully tomorrow the new mainboard will arrive...

 

Cheers,

Nico

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IMG_20190712_132029_resized_20190712_073844532.jpg

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I bet LSI never dreamed a motherboard manufacturer would be dumb enough to put a grounded shield where it could contact the card. I would be having a conversation with ASRock.

 

It looks to me like the electrically hot side of the surface mount fuse at F1 did indeed butt up directly against the metal shroud.

 

Good catch @StevenD!

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By observision, shot circuit likely happen on slot metal cover, but I don't think so, the fuse or any components have enough clearances away from the cover.

 

Burning seems happen in front of fuse ( resistor worst ), so haven't avoid the incident .

 

Edited by Benson
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21 minutes ago, Benson said:

the fuse or any components have enough clearances away from the cover.

Maybe the case angled the board towards that edge when tightened into the back panel?

 

I've seen people use too tall motherboard standoffs, or just poor manufacturing tolerances. Also, the typical card in that slot would have retention at the other end of the board with the "hockey stick" clip. This board only attaches at one end, allowing uneven insertion.

 

In any case, there was obviously zero clearance in an area that needed an air gap.

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23 minutes ago, jonathanm said:

Also, the typical card in that slot would have retention at the other end of the board with the "hockey stick" clip. This board only attaches at one end, allowing uneven insertion. 

I agree this point much more.

 

If ref. PCIe pin assignment, once pin A3 B3 short with A4 B4, burnning will happen.

IMG_20190713_214958.thumb.jpg.383ed6f3d8955648580fef997613866f.jpg

 

Edited by Benson
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Thanks everyone for your input. It very looks like the marked part of the card touched the metal of the PCI slot... but it's hard to tell afterwards.

Also I am very sure it was mounted correctly and vertically.

 

The good news is - the server is up and running again after a swap of the motherboard!

IMG_20190713_154209.jpg

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I'd send those pictures to both LSI and ASRock.

 

Somebody messed up. I can't find clear guidance on the physical specs as I'm not a PCI-SIG member, but there are only three possibilities I can see here.

 

1. ASRock ignored the specs when they added metal shielding where there wasn't supposed to be any conductive material present.

2. LSI ignored the specs by putting components in a "no go" area.

3. PCI-SIG hasn't actually codified one or the other of these specifications. I find that difficult to believe.

 

This kind of thing isn't supposed to be allowed to happen.

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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

Hi there. So far it has been very frustrating.

I first called the seller (a quite big german online shop) and sent them the damaged motherboard. 2 weeks later the mainboard returned with a lettter saying they won't do anything, because I inserted the card improperly.

I then contacted the Asrock support - they told me to contact their RMA department. The RMA website says "please contact the seller". Which I did again.... They told me I probably have to pay for a repair when they send the mainboard on my behalf for a check / repair to Asrock's RMA.

What I haven't tried so far is contacting LSI...

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  • 1 month later...

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