- Cloud Email
Email Deliverability: Why Your Business Emails End Up in Spam
6 Mar, 2026

£2742.06 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
If you’re building or refreshing a rack server on a budget and you want something that just *works* in real workloads, the Lenovo-branded Xeon Silver 4215R is a sensible choice—especially when you’re aiming for reliability over flashy benchmarks. That said, at **£2,285.05 ex-VAT** it’s not an “impulse buy” CPU. In practice, I’d only recommend it if it’s already part of a broader Lenovo server deal (where the platform value offsets the CPU spend), or if you’ve got a clear workload profile that benefits from what this generation is good at: steady multi-thread performance for typical business server tasks.
Who should buy: buyers deploying **virtualisation-heavy environments**, file/app services, and general enterprise workloads where you care about uptime and predictable throughput more than peak performance per core. Who should *not*: anyone tempted to overpay for “server spec theatre,” or small teams doing mostly light workloads where a cheaper processor would deliver the same user experience. Bottom line—this is a “buy if it fits the system and use case” part. If you’re shopping CPU-only and trying to minimise cost-per-workload, you’ll likely find better value elsewhere unless this price is bundled or otherwise justified by the rest of the platform.

Lenovo
Intel Xeon Silver 4114 - 2.2 GHz - 10-core - 20 threads - 13.75 MB cache - for ThinkSystem SR590

Lenovo
Intel Xeon Gold 6126 - 2.6 GHz - 12-core - 19.25 MB cache - for ThinkSystem SN550

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
AMD EPYC 9124 - 3 GHz - 16-core - 32 threads - 64 MB cache