Discussion i9-9900T (8C/16T 35W TDP) in a Lenovo M920q (~1L case)?

Parallax

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Jun 3, 2020
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Hello again,

Yes, I'm (not very) sorry I keep raising the Lenovo Mx20q series boxes, but in a central London flat they're a Godsend for home lab requirements.

I saw that the i9 9900T is a standard configuration for the M920q Tiny according to Lenovo. 8 cores with 16 threads would be great for virtualisation servers, with a very low power consumption at idle and it takes up basically no space, and fully loaded the Passmark is over 17,000 so this is quite a powerful box - my previous best was a M75-1q running a Ryzen 5 3400GE which is roughly half that. I see that the Ryzen 4xxx series is coming in the M75-2q for a nice speed boost but it will be a while before those appear on the secondary market.

In the meantime then the i9 9900T looks interesting, but it is reassuringly expensive at retail if indeed you can find it, so I went looking for alternative sources.

Step one, I *cough* "needed" a new M920q Tiny to try this out. I'm not particularly keen to pay full price on these, so eBay it is and I waited around a month until one came up with a Pentium Gold CPU (the lowest model). The starting price was more than I wanted (£250), so I waited. It didn't sell (bear in mind that eg M720qs are a hot commodity on eBay UK at the moment, going up around 20% in the last 3 months), so I waited and it was relisted. Again, £200, still more than I wanted - so, reader, again I waited. After a while the seller made an offer of £160, I counter-offered £150 ($200), and it has duly arrived - with 8 GB RAM and a 500GB SSD, which is fine, I have 2x 16GB SODIMMs and a spare NVME drive to add to it to start. The Tinys will support 64GB of RAM maximum.

Step two, online research leads me to believe that although the CPU TDP is shown as 35W these can draw up to 50W if allowed to do so. This model came with a standard 65W supply so I've ordered a 135W version just in case (about £20 ($28)).

Step three, the CPU. Not readily available to buy in the UK, as far as I can tell. Whenever you can't buy something through the usual channels, China is the next port of call and sure enough there's a plethora of sellers with deals on i9 9900Ts, but they are ES (engineering samples, see this super handy Russian chart) models, QQC0 and QQZ6. Although attractively priced (£180/$240 shipped) I had three concerns :
  • One, I am not 100% certain the Lenovo BIOS will be happy with an ES processor and it will almost certainly not have microcode fixes,
  • Two, these ESes are etched as such and "Intel Confidential" on the heat spreader and strictly speaking never supposed to be sold, so - thrill of owning something illicit aside - a future buyer of my system may well look askance at it and make it hard(er) to get a fair price. ES chips also show up as Genuine Intel CPU 0000 <speed> ES in CPU-Z so may not be ideal for hypervisors trying to pass CPU info to the VMs, although I've not researched this.
  • Finally, these ES versions are clocked 15-20% lower (1.7/3.8GHz) than retail chips (2.1/4.4GHz) which seems to negate much of the benefit of this whole exercise. I could just buy say an i7 8700T (6C/12T) for much the same performance and cost, and it would be actually officially supported.
So I have gone a layer lower into the Matrix and looked on Taobao, where it looks like genuine 9900Ts can be had for ~£270/$375 plus shipping costs from a reshipper like Superbuy. (Note if you can find QS (Qualification Samples) out in the wild, these are all but identical to retail CPUs in terms of how the OS sees them, so these could be a good buy depending on your appetite for risk, sense of adventure, etc.). I'll be ordering a retail CPU and whether you're interested or not, I'll update here.
 
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GuilleAcoustic

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I recently bought an i9-10900T from Alternate. They are based in Germany and have a good selection of 35W Intel CPU. I'm in France and my order arrived in 3 days. Paid 469€ for the i9 and it's a genuine one, not an ES/QS ;)

Below are links to filtered CPU listings (35W, 8th/9th gen, 10th gen)
 

mishmash

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Jan 12, 2020
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I recently bought an i9-10900T from Alternate. They are based in Germany and have a good selection of 35W Intel CPU. I'm in France and my order arrived in 3 days. Paid 469€ for the i9 and it's a genuine one, not an ES/QS ;)

Below are links to filtered CPU listings (35W, 8th/9th gen, 10th gen)
Also in France, and also picked up my 10600T from Alternate :)
 

LukeD

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Jun 29, 2016
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Keep an eye out on HP's website, they sometimes have promotions and you can pickup a preconfigured 9900t system on the cheap:

 
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Parallax

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Jun 3, 2020
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That is a fantastic deal, but me being in the UK would add quite a lot of cost to that even if I could convince them to sell it to me, a 20% import duty and ~$70 in shipping. But thanks for pointing it out, I'll see if HP UK gets desperate as well.
 

Parallax

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Updating this thread - I bought an i9 9900T from Taobao for ~$342 plus about $20 of shipping. Arrived in 10 days which included Christmas! I've installed it tonight in the Lenovo M920q as I described above. It's a pretty simple operation, about 20 minutes including wondering where my screwdriver was, and it's certainly a very fast machine if you need a whole bunch of compute in ~1L of space, or have a lot of VMs.
 
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LukeD

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Yeah I just got an email from HP saying that my order is delayed. Old ETA was jan 6 but because of component shortages New ETA is 22 feb
 

Parallax

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Yeah I just got an email from HP saying that my order is delayed. Old ETA was jan 6 but because of component shortages New ETA is 22 feb
Ouch. Want the link to the bare CPU I bought? I used Superbuy as buying and shipping agent, was easy and fast.
 
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LukeD

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Was it a retail chip or ENgineering Sample ? ES ?
I want the retail chip because it’s a few hundred MHz faster
 

Parallax

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Of course. You can buy it direct through your own shopping agent here or through Superbuy here.

It took 2 days for Superbuy to buy the item and receive it in China, photograph it etc., then a day for me to approve it (given timezone differences and whatnot I missed the Chinese working day on December 21st), it was shipped on December 22nd and I had it December 29th in the UK, which I think is exceptional. I used EMS as a shipping method.
 

LukeD

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It’s gone up to $399 now
Also what are the differences in packages ? There’s like $20 difference between them
 

Parallax

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It’s gone up to $399 now
Also what are the differences in packages ? There’s like $20 difference between them
It's explained in the description. Package 1 is the 9900T, 2 is the normal 9900, and 3 is the 10900T (10C/20T) which I was not aware existed.

The 9900T is about $370 depending on how much you get charged for exchange rates. Then about $18 I think for Superbuy to do the work for you, and then shipping is hard to say because there are many options, and I bought other things at the same time and Superbuy consolidated them for shipping so it's hard to say on a standalone basis. The £ was strong at the time so that helped me.
 

Revenant

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When I started hunting T-series chips, I ended up buying a used HP unit and pulling the chip from it. I will warn you about the T-series chips though. They say 35 watts but if your mainboard is out of spec, they'll run right up to whatever wattage they want to run. Watch your settings.
 
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Parallax

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Jun 3, 2020
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When I started hunting T-series chips, I ended up buying a used HP unit and pulling the chip from it. I will warn you about the T-series chips though. They say 35 watts but if your mainboard is out of spec, they'll run right up to whatever wattage they want to run. Watch your settings.
Yeah, there were some discussions about this in a Japanese forum. Buying the 135W power adapter to replace the 65W they generally come with gets you up to a 2x performance increase with some thermal impact.

So far the fan has been inaudible and temperatures are fine, but I'll keep an eye on it.
 
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