Dell PowerEdge R650xs 4-Bay 3.5" Drives [15th Gen]
The Dell PowerEdge R650xs 4-Bay 3.5" is the large-form-factor capacity configuration of Dell's 15th gen cost-optimized 1U platform: four 3.5" SAS or SATA hot-plug bays, one or two 3rd Generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake-SP, socket LGA 4189), up to 16 DDR4-3200 RDIMM slots, and PCIe Gen4 throughout. This is the R650xs variant for workloads that need bulk LFF capacity in 1U at value-tier acquisition cost: branch-office NAS heads, edge nodes with bulk local storage, remote backup targets, and small-business consolidated hosts.
For the full R650xs platform write-up at maximum drive density, see the primary R650xs 10-Bay 2.5" page; for the standard NVMe-capable SFF configuration see the R650xs 8-Bay 2.5". The compute, memory, and management platform is identical across all three variants; this page differs in the front-bay storage layout, which is LFF and SAS or SATA only.
To configure a build, call us at 1-800-778-1545 or use the quote form on this page; we respond within 24 hours. Volume pricing applies at 5 units and above. Every Refurbished Dell PowerEdge R650xs ships after a 12+ hour burn-in that exercises every memory channel, every PCIe lane, and every drive bay, and it carries our standard 180-day warranty with 1-Year, 2-Year, and 3-Year Premium options available.
When 4 LFF Bays Is the Right Choice
This is the most specialized configuration in the R650xs family, and we will be direct about it: the R650xs is engineered around the Universal Backplane native-NVMe story, and the LFF variant deliberately sets that capability aside in favor of bulk 3.5" capacity. The combination of 1U, LFF, and the R650xs platform is a specific one. It earns its place when:
- You are already standardized on the R650xs platform for other roles and want one chassis family across the fleet for parts, spares, and tooling consistency.
- The workload needs bulk LFF capacity in a 1U footprint specifically, which rules out the deeper 2U LFF platforms.
- The compute and memory fit comfortably inside the R650xs envelope (up to 32 cores per socket, up to roughly 1 TB of RAM).
For many LFF capacity workloads the entry-tier R450 4-Bay 3.5" does the same job at a lower price, and we will say so at quote time. This page is the right call when R650xs platform consistency is the deciding factor or the workload sits at the top of the xs compute envelope.
Storage - Four 3.5" LFF Bays
Four 3.5" SAS or SATA hot-swap bays on the LFF backplane. There is no front-bay NVMe on this chassis variant; the Universal Backplane native-NVMe capability is SFF-only. Practical capacity:
- 20 TB NL-SAS HDD x4: 80 TB raw, 40 TB usable at RAID 6, with the same usable at RAID 10 and better write performance.
- 24 TB NL-SAS HDD x4: 96 TB raw, 48 TB usable at RAID 6, the current LFF NL-SAS ceiling we stock.
- 8 TB SAS SSD x4: 32 TB raw; RAID 5 yields 24 TB usable, RAID 6 or RAID 10 yields 16 TB usable.
- Mixed tier: two SAS SSDs in RAID 1 for a hot tier plus two NL-SAS HDDs in RAID 1 for capacity, a common branch-office layout.
At a four-drive RAID 6, two of the four drives are parity, so the failure-domain math matters; for backup targets and bulk archival that tradeoff is usually acceptable, but we will walk through RAID 6 versus RAID 10 with you for the specific workload. Boot is handled by the BOSS-S1 card, the device the xs ships: a dual M.2 SATA module in hardware RAID 1 that keeps the operating system off the front bays and leaves all four LFF bays available for data. An optional rear-bay drive kit (2x 2.5", NVMe-capable even on the LFF chassis) is available for a hot spare or a dedicated mirror.
Storage Controllers
The R650xs runs the Dell PERC 11 controller family. On the SAS or SATA LFF backplane the relevant options are:
- PERC H755 (8 GB cache, battery-backed): the production SAS and SATA RAID default, the standard hardware-RAID controller for LFF capacity builds.
- PERC H745 (battery-backed): mainstream SAS and SATA RAID for mixed and read-heavy profiles.
- PERC H355 and H345 (entry-tier): RAID 0, 1, and 10 only. These do not provide RAID 5 or RAID 6; for the parity RAID that LFF capacity builds usually want, quote the H755 or H745. Assuming parity support on the H355 is a common configuration trap on 15th gen platforms.
- HBA355i (pass-through HBA): for software-defined storage and ZFS-style stacks that want raw devices.
- S150 (software RAID via chipset): dev, test, and light boot mirroring only, never a production data recommendation.
The PERC H755N (NVMe hardware RAID) is not relevant on this chassis because the front backplane is SAS and SATA only.
Processors
One or two 3rd Generation Intel Xeon Scalable processors (Ice Lake-SP, 2021) on socket LGA 4189, capped at 32 cores per socket on the R650xs SKU list. The platform is dual-socket-capable; the cost optimization is strongest at single-socket, which is the common build for the capacity and backup roles this variant serves. For NAS heads, backup targets, and edge nodes, a lower-core, lower-power SKU is usually the right match:
- Xeon Silver 4309Y (8 cores, 2.8 GHz, 105 W) or Silver 4310 (12 cores, 2.1 GHz, 120 W): the economical single-socket choice for NAS and backup-target roles where the drives, not the CPU, carry the workload.
- Xeon Silver 4316 (20 cores, 2.3 GHz, 150 W): standard mid-tier for a consolidated small-business host running a handful of VMs alongside the file and backup roles.
- Xeon Gold 6326 (16 cores, 2.9 GHz, 185 W): higher per-core frequency when a licensing-bound database also lives on the box.
For capacity-tier workloads the top of the CPU stack is rarely the right spend; we size the SKU to the role and put the budget into drives and memory where it does more good.
Memory
Up to 16 DDR4 DIMM slots: eight per socket, eight channels per socket, one DIMM per channel. A single-socket build populates eight slots; a dual-socket build uses all sixteen.
- Single-socket ceiling: 512 GB (8x 64 GB dual-rank RDIMM).
- Dual-socket ceiling: roughly 1 TB (16x 64 GB dual-rank RDIMM), the platform maximum. For more than 1 TB per node, the full R650 is the correct chassis.
- Registered ECC RDIMM, no Optane Persistent Memory.
- Typical capacity-role builds: 64 GB to 256 GB, which covers NAS caching, backup-target metadata, and a modest VM count comfortably.
Speed is DDR4-3200 with a 3200-capable CPU, held flat across a full population because the xs runs one DIMM per channel.
Networking and PCIe Expansion
Production networking attaches through the OCP NIC 3.0 slot (PCIe Gen4 x8), the 15th gen replacement for the rNDC mezzanine used on 13th and 14th gen Dell platforms, so it does not consume a PCIe expansion slot. For NAS and backup roles, dual-port 10 GbE SFP+ or BASE-T is the common attach; dual-port 25 GbE SFP28 suits a busier consolidated host or a backup target ingesting from many clients. PCIe is Gen4 throughout, with up to three expansion slots by riser, plus the dedicated PERC slot and the OCP 3.0 slot.
GPU Support
This is a capacity-storage configuration, not a GPU platform. The 1U envelope supports at most one or two single-width, low-profile 75 W accelerators (an NVIDIA A2 or T4-class card) for light inference or transcode, but a 4-bay LFF capacity host is rarely the right home for any GPU. If the deployment genuinely needs GPU compute, the 2U R750xs 16-Bay 2.5" is the platform with the thermal and slot budget for double-width accelerators.
Management - iDRAC9 Generation
The R650xs ships iDRAC9 (the 15th gen management generation) with the Lifecycle Controller. Our refurbished builds include iDRAC9 Enterprise unless otherwise specified, which gives remote sites the full out-of-band management, virtual media, and Redfish automation that distributed branch and edge deployments depend on. The 15th gen security baseline is the cyber-resilient stack: a Silicon Root of Trust anchoring a signed firmware chain, Secure Boot, optional Secure Erase, and System Lockdown, with TPM 2.0 available for NIST, CMMC, FedRAMP, HIPAA, or PCI DSS frameworks. For a fleet of remote-site backup or NAS hosts, the iDRAC9 management plane is what makes lights-out operation practical.
Power and Cooling
Up to two redundant power supplies in a 1+1 configuration. Available wattages:
| PSU wattage | Efficiency | Typical configuration fit |
|---|---|---|
| 600 W | Platinum | Single-socket Silver CPU, four LFF drives, baseline memory, 10 GbE OCP. The common capacity-role build, and an xs-specific efficiency floor the full R650 does not offer. |
| 800 W | Platinum | Single-socket with a busier VM count or SAS SSD population. |
| 1100 W | Platinum or Titanium | Dual-socket or high-TDP builds. Uncommon on a 4-bay capacity host. |
Large NL-SAS HDDs draw a meaningful spin-up surge; for a fully populated HDD build, the 600 W floor is adequate at steady state but we size with the spin-up draw in mind. Cooling is front-to-rear air for the standard 19-inch rack, ASHRAE A2 across standard configurations.
Physical Specs & Platform Notes
- Form factor: 1U rack, Dell regulatory model E69S. The xs chassis is roughly three inches shallower than the full R650, which can help in shallow-rack branch and edge cabinets.
- PCIe expansion: up to three PCIe Gen4 slots by riser, plus the dedicated PERC slot and the OCP NIC 3.0 slot.
- Parts availability: 15th gen Ice Lake parts are current and well-stocked; PERC 11 controllers, OCP 3.0 NICs, BOSS-S1 cards, DDR4-3200 RDIMMs, LFF carriers, and PSUs are all readily sourced, with Dell ProSupport still available.
- Accessories we recommend: the Dell R450/R650xs BOSS-S1 boot card with dual 240 GB M.2 SSDs to keep the OS off the four LFF bays, the Dell sliding rail kit, and the cable management arm.
- Platform notes: the front backplane is SAS and SATA only with no NVMe; the board is fixed at 16 DIMM slots with no Optane; CPU hot-plug is not supported; the optional rear 2x 2.5" kit is NVMe-capable and is the place to put boot or a hot spare without giving up an LFF bay.
Our Assessment
Where it excels: The R650xs 4-Bay LFF is the right call for bulk 1U capacity at the R650xs platform tier: branch-office NAS heads, edge nodes with bulk local storage, and distributed remote-site backup targets, particularly where a fleet is already standardized on the R650xs platform and operational consistency across roles is worth real money. With the BOSS-S1 carrying the OS, all four front bays go to the data pool.
Where to look instead: For most LFF capacity workloads that do not need R650xs platform consistency, the entry-tier R450 4-Bay does the same job for less. When more than four LFF bays are needed, the 2U R550 8-Bay or R750 12-Bay are the right platforms. When the workload needs NVMe, the SFF R650xs variants are the answer, and when it needs the full R650 memory and CPU ceiling, the R650 4-Bay is the step up.
Bottom line: Buy the R650xs 4-Bay LFF when 1U LFF capacity is a hard requirement and the R650xs platform is already your standardization choice, or when the workload sits at the top of the xs compute envelope. The typical buyer runs a distributed fleet of branch or edge sites and values one platform family across roles. We will be honest at quote time: if your workload would be equally well served by the R450 4-Bay or by stepping to 2U, we will recommend the alternative and quote both. Matching the chassis to the workload beats defaulting to the higher-tier variant when a lower-cost option does the job.
Honest Limitations
- No front-bay NVMe; the Universal Backplane native-NVMe capability that defines the R650xs is SFF-only and absent on this LFF variant.
- Only four front bays; storage-primary workloads usually want a 2U LFF platform with more spindles.
- At a four-drive RAID 6, half the drives are parity, so the usable-to-raw ratio is low and the failure domain is concentrated.
- For many LFF roles the entry-tier R450 4-Bay delivers the same function for less; the R650xs LFF only pulls ahead on platform standardization or top-of-envelope compute.
- The 16-DIMM board and 32-core ceiling cap the box well below the full R650; memory-heavy or compute-dense roles belong elsewhere.
Workload Fit
| R650xs 4-Bay 3.5" is right for | Consider alternatives for |
|---|---|
| Branch-office NAS standardized on the R650xs platform | R450 compute envelope sufficient (R450 4-Bay 3.5", lower cost) |
| Edge nodes with bulk LFF plus R650xs platform consistency | Full R650 memory or CPU ceiling needed (R650 4-Bay 3.5") |
| Distributed remote-site backup targets at scale | More than 4 LFF bays needed (R550 8-Bay 3.5") |
| 1U LFF where the R650xs sourcing path is already in place | NVMe required (R650xs 8-Bay or 10-Bay 2.5") |
| Small-business consolidated hosts with bulk file storage | PCIe Gen5 or DDR5 deltas justified (R660xs step-up) |
Where to Look Instead
- Entry-tier LFF at lower cost: the Dell PowerEdge R450 4-Bay 3.5" delivers four LFF bays in 1U at entry-tier price and is the more economical pick for most LFF capacity workloads that do not need R650xs platform standardization.
- Full memory and CPU headroom: the Dell PowerEdge R650 4-Bay 3.5" is the same chassis with the full 32-DIMM Ice Lake memory board and CPUs to 40 cores per socket.
- More LFF bays in 2U: the Dell PowerEdge R550 8-Bay 3.5" doubles the LFF bay count for storage-primary roles.
- NVMe and maximum density: the R650xs 8-Bay 2.5" SFF configuration restores native NVMe for performance workloads.
- 16th gen platform step: the Dell PowerEdge R660xs 4-Bay 3.5" moves to DDR5 and Sapphire Rapids or Emerald Rapids silicon when those changes matter.
Ready to Configure?
Tell us your workload, your single-socket or dual-socket requirement, your memory target, your CPU SKU preference (or a workload description so we can recommend), your LFF drive mix (NL-SAS, SAS SSD, or SATA SSD), your network attach (10 GbE or 25 GbE), and quantity. Volume pricing applies at 5 units and above, and we respond within 24 hours. Every Refurbished Dell PowerEdge R650xs ships after a 12+ hour burn-in covering every PCIe slot, every memory channel, and every drive bay, and it carries our standard 180-day warranty with extended options available. Call 1-800-778-1545 or use the quote form on this page. If your sizing suggests the R450 4-Bay or a 2U LFF platform would serve the workload equally well, we will recommend the alternative and quote both side by side.
Dell PowerEdge R650xs 4-Bay 3.5"
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