- Cloud Backup
Setting Up a Disaster Recovery Plan for Your New Office
12 Jan, 2026

£4321.51 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you’re buying the Lenovo Intel Xeon Gold 5222 for £3.6k ex-VAT, you’d better have a clear workload reason—because this isn’t a “nice-to-have” CPU, it’s a serious spend. In the real world, Xeon Gold parts like this make most sense for server builds where reliability, virtualization density, and sustained performance under load matter (think core compute for virtual machines, backend apps, moderate-to-heavy database workloads, or business-critical services where uptime and predictability beat bang-for-buck). If you’re replacing an existing server CPU, you also avoid a bigger project cost around redesigning the whole platform.
That said, if you’re just standing up a couple of VMs, doing general file/app hosting, or you’re not actually CPU-bound, the money can be hard to justify. In those cases, you’re usually better off optimizing the rest of the server build (memory capacity, storage performance, and overall platform balance) or looking at a more cost-effective processor tier—otherwise you pay for headroom you won’t use. Bottom line: buy it if you can point to a specific performance need and you’re running in a production environment; don’t buy it if this is for light workloads or you’re trying to future-proof without measuring what’s actually limiting performance today.

Lenovo
Intel Xeon Gold 5218R - 2.1 GHz - 20-core - 40 threads - 27.5 MB cache - for ThinkSystem SR530 7X07, 7X08, SR570 7Y02, 7Y03, 7Y04, SR630 7X01, 7X02

Lenovo
Intel Xeon Silver 4316 - 2.3 GHz - 20-core - 40 threads - 30 MB cache - for ThinkAgile HX7530 Appliance, MX3530-H Hybrid Appliance, MX3531-H Hybrid Certified Node

Lenovo
Intel Xeon Silver 4310 - 2.1 GHz - 12-core - 24 threads - 18 MB cache - for ThinkAgile MX3330-F Appliance, MX3330-H Appliance, MX3331-F Certified Node

Lenovo
Intel Xeon 6515P - 2.3 GHz - 16-core - 32 threads - 72 MB cache