Dell PowerEdge HS5610 vs R760

Option A

Dell PowerEdge HS5610

VS
Option B

Dell PowerEdge R760

The HS5610 and the R760 are both 16G, two-socket Dell PowerEdge rack servers built on the same generation of Intel Xeon silicon, but they are aimed at very different buyers. The HS5610 is a cloud-scale, 1U server purpose-built and sold through Dell's Hyperscale Next Program for select Cloud Service Providers (CSPs) — an open, streamlined, density-and-cost-optimized design. The R760 is Dell's mainstream 2U enterprise workhorse: highly configurable, broadly available through normal channels, and built to flex across virtualization, databases, mixed workloads, and GPU acceleration. This page lays out where each one fits so you can qualify the deal correctly rather than treat them as interchangeable.

Side by side

Dell PowerEdge HS5610Dell PowerEdge R760
PositioningCloud-scale / hyperscale server purpose-built for CSPs, offered through Dell's Hyperscale Next Program (limited, qualified availability).Mainstream general-purpose enterprise server, broadly available through standard Dell channels and resellers.
Form factor1U, two-socket — density- and cost-optimized for racks of largely identical nodes.2U, two-socket — more internal volume for storage, expansion cards, and GPUs.
ProcessorsTwo 4th or 5th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable CPUs, in the configurations Dell qualifies for the cloud-scale platform.Two 4th or 5th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable (and Xeon CPU Max) CPUs spanning a wider range, up to higher core counts in the 2U thermal envelope.
Memory16 DDR5 DIMM slots (8 channels per socket, 1 DIMM per channel), supporting large RDIMM capacities at up to 5600 MT/s.32 DDR5 DIMM slots (2 DIMMs per channel), enabling substantially higher maximum memory capacity for memory-hungry workloads.
Storage & expansion1U front bays (SAS/SATA/NVMe options up to 10x 2.5" or 4x 3.5"), with the I/O and slot count a dense 1U chassis allows.Up to 24x 2.5" front drives plus rear bays, and more PCIe Gen5 slots — far more configuration headroom in 2U.
GPU / accelerationNot the platform for heavy acceleration; 1U cloud-scale nodes prioritize compute density over large GPUs.Supports GPUs (up to 2 double-wide or several single-wide), suiting AI/ML inferencing, VDI, and accelerated workloads.
Systems managementOptional Open Server Manager (Dell-supported OpenBMC) or standard iDRAC9, both factory-installed on the same silicon; built for open, at-scale fleet automation.Standard iDRAC9 with Lifecycle Controller — Dell's full-featured enterprise management stack.
Typical buyerCloud and service providers deploying many near-identical nodes who value openness, density, and cost per node.Enterprises and commercial accounts needing a flexible, single-server-to-fleet platform for mixed workloads.

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Dell PowerEdge HS5610

Dell PowerEdge R760

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Choose Dell PowerEdge HS5610 when

You are a Cloud or Internet Service Provider deploying servers at scale, where cost per node, rack density, power efficiency, and fleet-level automation matter more than per-box configurability. The 1U cloud-scale design and the option of Open Server Manager (Dell-supported OpenBMC) make it a strong fit for open, software-defined environments that want to standardize on a streamlined hardware build and manage thousands of near-identical nodes. Note the practical gate: the HS5610 is sold through Dell's Hyperscale Next Program to select CSPs, so it is not a general-purpose order for every account — qualify the customer against that program first.

Choose Dell PowerEdge R760 when

You need a flexible, broadly available enterprise server that can adapt to many workloads — virtualization, databases, consolidation, VDI, and AI/ML inferencing. The 2U chassis gives you more memory capacity (up to 32 DIMMs), far more drive bays, more PCIe Gen5 expansion, and GPU support that the 1U HS5610 is not built for. It ships through normal Dell channels with full iDRAC9 and Lifecycle Controller, so it is the right default for the vast majority of enterprise and commercial accounts that want one versatile platform they can configure per project rather than a fixed cloud-scale node.

These servers rarely compete for the same deal, so the decision is really about who the customer is. If the account is a qualifying CSP standardizing on dense, cost-optimized, openly managed nodes deployed by the rack, the HS5610 is purpose-built for that mission — but remember it is gated behind Dell's Hyperscale Next Program. For essentially every other buyer — enterprises, commercial accounts, and partners who need configuration flexibility, more memory and storage, PCIe expansion, GPU options, and the standard iDRAC9 management experience — the R760 is the right, and far more readily orderable, choice. As a reseller, qualify on one question first: is this a select CSP eligible for Hyperscale Next? If not, the R760 is your platform; if so, the HS5610 may unlock better economics at fleet scale.

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Frequently asked

Can I order the HS5610 like a normal PowerEdge?

Not generally. The HS5610 is a cloud-scale server offered through Dell's Hyperscale Next Program for select Cloud Service Providers, not a standard catalog configuration available to every buyer. The R760, by contrast, is broadly available through normal Dell channels and resellers. If a customer isn't a qualifying CSP, the R760 (or another mainstream PowerEdge) is the appropriate recommendation.

Are the HS5610 and R760 from the same generation?

Yes. Both are Dell's 16th-generation (16G) PowerEdge servers built on 4th and 5th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable processors with DDR5 memory and PCIe Gen5. The core difference isn't silicon generation — it's design intent: the HS5610 is a 1U cloud-scale node optimized for density and cost, while the R760 is a 2U general-purpose server optimized for flexibility and expansion.

What is Open Server Manager and do I need it?

Open Server Manager is Dell's supported distribution of OpenBMC, offered as an option on cloud-scale servers like the HS5610 for customers who want open, at-scale fleet management while keeping Dell's firmware, security, and support. It runs on the same silicon as iDRAC and can be converted back to iDRAC if needed. Most enterprise buyers don't need it and are well served by the standard iDRAC9 stack on the R760; it's primarily valuable to CSPs standardizing on open management tooling.

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