I almost bought a used Nvidia Tesla GPU for my home lab, then I read what owners actually deal with
A used Tesla GPU listing on a used marketplace is one of the most tempting things for home labbers shopping around. 24 GB of VRAM on a card that originally sold for over $5,000, now hovering around the $300 mark on eBay. For anyone trying to run local LLMs or stuff a fat memory budget into a Proxmox box, the math is difficult to argue with. I almost pulled the trigger on one myself, but then I began to read forum threads from those who own them. If these GPUs were truly a home lab cheat code, everyone would be using them, but the driver situation and physical compatibility issues are just too much to bear for most enthusiasts, including myself.
A used Tesla GPU listing on a used marketplace is one of the most tempting things for home labbers shopping around. 24 GB of VRAM on a card that originally sold for over $5,000, now hovering around the $300 mark on eBay. For anyone trying to run local LLMs or stuff a fat memory budget into a Proxmox box, the math is difficult to argue with. I almost pulled the trigger on one myself, but then I began to read forum threads from those who own them. If these GPUs were truly a home lab cheat code, everyone would be using them, but the driver situation and physical compatibility issues are just too much to bear for most enthusiasts, including myself.
Olivia Miller
Seattle
Seattle
Published by: aplhsindia.in
