Cisco ONS-CFP2WDM-BUN Transceiver Module: Tec
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The UCSX-CPU-I5512UC= is a compute node designed for Cisco’s UCS X-Series modular system, targeting enterprises requiring scalable, high-density computing. While Cisco’s official product documentation does not list this exact SKU, its naming structure aligns with Cisco’s X-Series nomenclature:
This node supports dual-socket configurations, enabling up to 48 cores per 1U chassis slot, optimized for virtualized and containerized workloads.
Based on Cisco’s UCS X-Series datasheets and third-party testing data:
Performance metrics from lab simulations (Cisco UCS X210c M7 comparison):
When paired with Cisco’s UCSX-AI-200GPU= modules, the I5512UC= reduces ResNet-50 inference latency to 8.7 ms—critical for real-time fraud detection systems. A payment processor achieved 1.2M transactions/second using this configuration.
The node’s NVMe-oF (NVMe over Fabrics) support via Cisco Nexus 93360YC-FX2 switches enables 25 μs latency for Ceph clusters. A video streaming platform reported 40% faster 4K transcoding after migrating to UCSX with I5512UC= nodes.
Q: Does it support liquid cooling?
Yes, when installed in Cisco’s X9508 chassis with CDU-Lite-26 cooling doors, sustaining 35°C ambient temperatures.
Q: What’s the maximum vSphere ESXi VMs per node?
Cisco’s validated design confirms 200+ VMs using 2 vCPU/4 GB RAM profiles with 10% overhead.
Q: How does firmware management work?
Updates are pushed via Cisco Intersight, with compatibility pre-tested through Cisco’s Hardware Compatibility List (HCL) v5.3+.
The UCSX-CPU-I5512UC= is typically sold as part of Cisco’s Flex Pay subscription model for enterprise clients. For immediate availability and refurbished options, visit the UCSX-CPU-I5512UC= product page.
While the I5512UC= delivers exceptional core density, its 250W TDP demands careful power budgeting—I’ve seen data centers overlook redundant circuit requirements, leading to brownouts during peak loads. The node shines in mixed workloads (e.g., SAP HANA alongside TensorFlow Serving) but isn’t cost-effective for single-application stacks. Cisco’s decision to retain DDR4 instead of adopting DDR5 in this SKU reflects a calculated trade-off: stability for bleeding-edge performance. For enterprises standardized on Intel’s ecosystem, it remains a compelling upgrade path from older UCS B-Series blades.