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When it comes to hardware I often read something like "Apple Mac computers, and other lower profile ...." For me it sounds like a better word for low end segment hardware but I am not sure about it. Google didn't help me well to answer this question. Is there something more connected to it? I need it to fully understand some articles. Term is used here for example: HBA H240

Storage controller - plug-in card - low profile

RayofCommand
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    In the context of expansion cards it usually means "thin", sometimes it means "short". Why they can't just say "thin" or "short", I don't know. In your Apple Mac quote, it sounds like it's just the general non-IT meaning of "less well known". – A E Oct 19 '15 at 19:21

3 Answers3

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You have a few PCIe form factors:

You have different card and/or bracket heights:

FH - Full-height
HH - Half-height

And different card lengths:

FL - Full-length
HL - Half-lenth

"Low-profile" is synonymous with half-height, half-length (HHHL).

An HBA like the HP H240 is a half-length card that comes with full-height and half-height brackets, and can fit into either type of server slot. If using with a Server like an HP DL360p Gen8, this give you options on card placement.

ewwhite
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    AND: it is not lower end hardware. It is less HIGHT. Like 2U rack servers - too small for full height. – TomTom Oct 19 '15 at 12:27
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    yep, I got that immediately :) , thanks for adding this info anyway – RayofCommand Oct 19 '15 at 12:32
  • @RayofCommand This is specific to PCIe cards, per your question, but in general the term `low profile` can apply to a lot of different hardware and can mean more or less specific things in each case. Sometimes it indicates a specific form factor, sometimes it just means somewhat vaguely smaller or thinner than typical. Other examples are things like RAM (ie: VLP/ULP [Very Low Profile/Ultra Low Profile](http://www.virtium.com/embedded-ssd-and-industrial-memory-products/memory/vlp-very-low-profile/)) – J... Oct 20 '15 at 01:02
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In the linked example, it is a description of the interface card's "form factor" -- it's physical properties of size and shape. It's about half the height of a regular PCI-E card.

womble
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6

In a general sense "low profile" usually means roughly "thin" or to a lesser extent "small".

In the specific case of PCI and similar cards "low profile" means that the card is small enough to fit vertically in a 2U rackmount case or a desktop case of similar thickness.

Note that low profile slots require a different bracket (the metal piece that surronds the external connectors and joins card to case) from standard slots. A card with a low profile bracket won't fit in a standard slot. A card with a standard bracket can be inserted in a low profile slot but you won't be able to screw it in place or put the lid back on the case. Many low profile cards come with a pair of interchangable brackets to allow fitting in either standard or low profile slots but not all do.

Peter Green
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  • Hmm, I usually see half-height slots with a horizontal orientation. – ewwhite Oct 19 '15 at 12:34
  • All the low profile slots i've seen have been with the card at right angles to the motherboard (so vertical in a desktop or rackmount setup, horizontal in a tower setup). – Peter Green Oct 19 '15 at 12:38
  • Nah... The HP DL300 series servers have horizontal half-height slots in their 1U and 2U servers (e.g. [DL380 G7](https://www.splusdirect.com/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/1800x/040ec09b1e35df139433887a97daa66f/_/h/_hp-proliant-dl380-g7-barebone-with-motherboard-599038-001-293765-001-image-6.jpg)) – ewwhite Oct 19 '15 at 12:43