F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Does the KVM PCIe card function with the Dell tower precision workstation?

Does the KVM PCIe card function with the Dell tower precision workstation?

Does the KVM PCIe card function with the Dell tower precision workstation?

S
ShadySky
Member
58
04-24-2025, 11:52 PM
#1
I own a Dell 5280 tower precision workstation. I want to remotely power it on or off and keep an eye on the booting screen. Does this KVM PCIe card fit with the workstation and suit my requirements?
S
ShadySky
04-24-2025, 11:52 PM #1

I own a Dell 5280 tower precision workstation. I want to remotely power it on or off and keep an eye on the booting screen. Does this KVM PCIe card fit with the workstation and suit my requirements?

E
ElTorchoN
Member
161
04-25-2025, 05:13 AM
#2
It's hard to understand.
I have two questions about it:
#1
I’m not sure how to activate its power-on feature (or if it functions at all). According to the available details, you must connect the PC case’s front I/O cables—power, reset switch, HDD LED—and then, using the included cable, reroute the connection to MoBo. After that, you also need to supply extra power so that when the system shuts down and there’s no power, the add-on card can turn the PC on. In theory, this should work. Am I right? I’m doubtful.
😒
#2
Dell is known for using proprietary components. MoBo, power connectors, PC cases—everything seems unique. It’s possible the front I/O cables are also proprietary, meaning you can’t use standard ATX connectors that the add-on requires. Even though it has the necessary pins for power, reset, and activity LEDs, my worry is that with Dell MoBo, these aren’t grouped together like they are with regular ATX boards.
Check your MoBo manual to find out where the front I/O connector pins are located on the MoBo, or open up the PC case to verify. This is how the typical set of front I/O pins appears:
E
ElTorchoN
04-25-2025, 05:13 AM #2

It's hard to understand.
I have two questions about it:
#1
I’m not sure how to activate its power-on feature (or if it functions at all). According to the available details, you must connect the PC case’s front I/O cables—power, reset switch, HDD LED—and then, using the included cable, reroute the connection to MoBo. After that, you also need to supply extra power so that when the system shuts down and there’s no power, the add-on card can turn the PC on. In theory, this should work. Am I right? I’m doubtful.
😒
#2
Dell is known for using proprietary components. MoBo, power connectors, PC cases—everything seems unique. It’s possible the front I/O cables are also proprietary, meaning you can’t use standard ATX connectors that the add-on requires. Even though it has the necessary pins for power, reset, and activity LEDs, my worry is that with Dell MoBo, these aren’t grouped together like they are with regular ATX boards.
Check your MoBo manual to find out where the front I/O connector pins are located on the MoBo, or open up the PC case to verify. This is how the typical set of front I/O pins appears: