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I purchased a used "Rackable Systems" server off eBay and I discovered to my surprise when it arrived it has power connectors which appear to require ~48 volts DC input. It looks like this:

connectors

connectors close up

What sort of adapter is normally used to plug this into regular 110v AC power (normal "wall plug" power in the United States)?

EDIT:

My question is specifically what is this power connector called? - different from AC Input for 48 Volt DC Powered Server which is asking how to hook it up (a question which was never answered with anything other than, essentially, "get a new server").

bgp
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    Possible duplicate of [AC Input for 48 Volt DC Powered Server](https://serverfault.com/questions/76540/ac-input-for-48-volt-dc-powered-server) – John Mahowald Jan 19 '19 at 18:52
  • @JohnMahowald Thanks, however it doesn't look like anyone directly answered that question either. There are various sources of raw 48v power but I'm looking for, ideally, a link to something I can just buy that has regular power (NEMA 5-15 grounded (Type B)) on one side, and the plug in the photo on the other side. I find it hard to believe that no such conversion device exists (not that anyone has said that, but I haven't encountered anything yet - I will post if I find it) – bgp Jan 19 '19 at 21:03
  • Does anyone even know what this connector is called? – bgp Jan 19 '19 at 21:05
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    I've been googling around a lot and can't find anything. There seem to be some (most?) versions of this type of PSU that have only 3 connections, which makes more sense: + - and ground. And when I've come across just the PSU for sale, there are pics where you can see that there are only 3 connections, so if you could find the connector, it'd be easy enough to wire it up (assuming you can also get a 48VDC source). – Ward - Reinstate Monica Jan 21 '19 at 04:17
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    Best suggestion, go to the EE.SE Chat and ask there if someone knows what the connector or type is called. I'm not sure it'd be ontopic to ask on EE.SE, but it might be. – Ward - Reinstate Monica Jan 21 '19 at 04:18
  • Thanks @Ward, I’ll give that a shot. It also looks like there are replacement power supplies that fit this case, are reasonably priced, and that use normal 110v AC power, that’s probably the route I’ll go. If it pans out I’ll post an answer with what part ended up working. – bgp Jan 21 '19 at 04:47

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