Dear Forum, having successfully accomplished to push an HP Compaq Elite 8300 USDT to its maximal computing/gaming potential (see my previous thread), it's time to upgrade an HP Compaq Pro 6300 SFF (Small Form Factor).
Why this particular nine-year old obsolete office PC? -It is build around my preferred LGA 1155 CPU socket and can be fitted with the fastest 3rd generation CPUs ever made for this format, specifically the Intel i7-3770K and Xeon E3-1280/1290 v2. To this very day, these CPUs are still widely respected for their dogged performance and reliability. The HP Pro 6300 is equipped with a PCIe X16 3.0 internal graphics slot, it has four DDR-SDRAM slots to allow installing a respectable 32GB (4x8GB) 1600 MHz of RAM, and they happen to be sold at very affordable prices via EBay and other Ecommerce businesses.
"The Compaq Pro 6300 is a flagship variant under the business PC series of HP. With SFF design and reliable build quality, the system adds more flexibility to your corporate house. The SFF design of the desktop is likely to support your official activities. It also supports ample system memory to help your staffs open bigger files and freely multitask before reaching the limit of the system."
My friends, it so happens that the bar for creating the fastest HP Compaq Pro 6300 SFF ever submitted to UserBenchmark is regrettably pretty low -see link and screen shot below. Regardless, the plan -project- is to blow the global competition, so to speak, out of the HP Pro 6300 SFF user waters when I am done.
Had to flash BIOS with a Rufus enabled bootable USB flash drive several times in order to complete this part of PC tuning to end up with the most recent available BIOS version. Had to flash to v02.85, then 2.90, then 2.98 (yes: 2.98, even though some say you need 2.99 in order to upgrade to the most recent version, but this worked for me), and then lastly to K01 v03.08 (see picture).
As all of you know, Rufus is a wonderful freeware program offering various exceedingly useful features including creating a BIOS bootable USB flash drive. The IT/IMS associates I happen to know all use it to this day.
* In order to connect the HP Pro 6300 SFF to a decent (full-size) external graphics card, a PCIe X16 to PCIe X16 extension cable/dock is required. I ordered the following cable (p/n R33SR-PW via AliExpress). There are many PCIe X16 to PCIe X16 cable versions to choose from, but you really need to watch the orientation of the PCIe X16 connectors. Also, I selected the "powered" (SATA 4-pin) option as it supposedly increases the data link performance. And yes, the chassis of my HP Pro 6300 SFF will need to be modified by cutting a horizontal slit in the side panel opposite the PCIe X16 slot.
Moving on, also worked on gaming optimization. In W10, DOS settings and the Radeon graphics card software. Here's a link among many others to optimize the video game "Hell Let Loose" (because it is one of the more demanding games). Also has upping NVIDIA performance suggestions: Increase Performance (FPS) in Hell Let Loose - 2020 (ghostarrow.com)
5.) And voil: the "Ultimate Performance" plan shows up. If not, restart computer first. -Look, this "ultimate" power plan option is only useful for specific applications, but it can make a difference speeding up your gaming adventures.
[EDIT: And making a difference it DOES: these tweaks increased the "Hell Let Loose" game performance on my HP Elite 8300 USDT from an average of 48.9 FPS to a very nice 71.8 FPS -about a 47% improvement! I expect that once I get all the parts installed on this PC (HP Pro 6300 SFF), the gaming performance will be considerably better.]
The powered (SATA to 4-pin) PCIe X16 extension cable/dock (p/n: R33SR-PW) came in. [Rather than cutting a horizontal opening gap through the chassis' side panel, I decided to create a much smaller access indentation in the top removable panel. -PENDING DONE]
Dear Forum, finding decent graphics cards at reasonable pricing is challenging these days. Likely not to change in the foreseeable future. Anyway, in my opinion, the best graphics card bang for your buck at this point in time would be the AMD Radeon RX 580 4GB -outperforms the Nvidia GTX 1650 4GB and the GTX 1060 3GB. This card offers very good 60+FPS performance at 1080p, including many more recent games, but you may have to scale down a few settings in some games to guarantee smooth performance. The RX 580 4GB is still available [10/21/21] and sells for about $275 - $325 online via Amazon. I found out that the GPU I ordered [now (10/21/21) no more available through Amazon] was actually sourced from HP desktops, such as the HP Pavilion Power 580-128a.
My friends, something else, you need a decent monitor for gaming, especially if it is hooked up to a high performance GPU. Among the many options available, I personally have had good luck with Acer monitors. Given that, I got an affordably priced Acer KG241Q-P (23.6" Full HD 1920 x 1080, 144Hz, 1ms, Monitor with AMD FreeSync Technology, 1 Display Port & 2 x HDMI).
To give praise where praise is due, this is not an issue with HP HD monitors. HP provides executable drivers, easy-peasy to install. Be aware that Acer and other monitor brands don't always make it as user-friendly as it should be.
However, cutting to the chase, it took some effort to figure out how to update the "Generic PnP Monitor" to the Acer "KG241Q P" driver in Windows. The normal standard procedure of download-driver, extract-files, "Update driver", "Browse my computer for drivers", "Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my computer", "Search for driver software in this location", and then "Browse" to the extracted file location, DID NOT WORK for this Acer monitor driver package.
All I got was the annoying Windows message: "Windows has determined the driver software for your device is up to date", and stubbornly left the "Generic PnP Monitor" driver in place. Doggonit.
Btw, this is how to FIX this issue:
1.) Go to the Acer Support Driver and Manuals web link, select your device: [Monitor], then under Series: [KG Series], and then under Model: [KG241QP]. Pick your OS, and download the driver package. For W10 64-bit it is dated 2020/06/17, version 1.0, Vendor: Acer. Then right click on the downloaded file, do "Extract All" (7-Zip: "Extract files"), open the extracted files folder and copy the files (Security Catalog, ICC Profile, and Setup Information) to an empty USB drive that is plugged into your PC.
2.) Go to Device Manager, click on the ">" sign to the left of "Monitors", click on "Generic PnP Monitor", then right-click and choose "Update driver". Then select "Browse my computer for driver software", then select "Let me pick from a list of device software drivers on my computer", then click on "Have disk..." and change the "A:\" to match your USB drive letter designation (such as "D:\"), and click "OK".
3.) Then go to "Select the device driver you want to install for this hardware", click on the "KG241Q P" driver, and click next. And this is it -if all has gone well, you should see the message "Windows has successfully updated your drivers" -you're done, good to go.
I hope this how-to may be useful to some of you.
Go gaming.
The AMD RX 580 4GB came in and installed. Interestingly, what I got was not an OEM "Renewed" HP RX 580 graphics card, but a OEM "Renewed" Dell RX 580 graphics card unit (see pictures). Given the massive market shortages of mid to high performance graphics cards, beggars can't be choosers in this case.
e.g. I have already installed a licensed copy of MS WORD and it would be ideal if 21H2 preserved all existing programs and files. I would rather avoid needing to re-install all third-party software again.
Has Microsoft perhaps offered a single-purpose utility to verify whether or not all installed drivers are compatible with pending Windows Updates and/or upgrading to newer versions of Windows 10?
Device Manager continues to list an IDE device, even though there is no PATA socket anywhere on the motherboard; and, the .pdf User Manual also confirms that this PC does not support any IDE / PATA storage devices e.g. old PATA HDD or ODD.
For example, one ASUS motherboard has 2 x integrated Gigabit LAN controllers: one PCIe and one PCI. I ENABLE the PCIe one, and DISABLE the PCI one. These settings have always worked smoothly with all of our ASUS motherboards.
My BEST GUESS, as of today, is a very subtle bug in the latest motherboard BIOS: for example, I have also DISABLED the 1 x PCI slot in that BIOS. Such a bug may be associated somehow with that change e.g. I can try ENABLING it to see if that makes any difference.
I enabled WinUpdateStop, because of all the published complaints about Windows Update. That was a wise decision, in retrospect, because it rendered this HP workstation VERY stable over the course of many years.
A search of the Internet for that error code finds results that suspect a device driver as the reason for the ROLL-BACK and fatal error code. But, our efforts to locate such a driver in the update logs turned up empty.
software related issues can be hard to pin down and since you are using a old release of win 10 currently and having problems with a in place update, consider doing a clean install, this method can save you much time and frustration I personally have a 6300 pro (SFF model) which uses the exact same motherboard,.. and windows 10 22H2 64bit installs without any issues and includes all necessary drivers for this models hardware short of some add in discrete video cards and printer drivers i would simply backup your existing data, download the win 10 installer of your choice (usb key or Iso) install the OS and be done with it
I agree with HP about wiping the hard drive and installing a fresh copy of Windows as something is clearly amiss with the existing Windows installation with no end in site of possibly getting it fixed after six days of troubleshooting.
c80f0f1006