Selling a used but working Nvidia drive PX2 Unit with a Liquid Cooling Reservoir all in a custom solid aluminum case for great heat dissipation. Both units were installed in a high end autonomous racing car, then removed. The car has never been in an accident nor damaged during any race. These are used in 2016+ Tesla vehicles as the self driving computer. These units cost over $15,000 each when new as developer units.


What you see in the images is what you get. The hoses and adapters will be included. The cables have been cut when we removed it from the car and will be the only cables that are included (see images). The cables are for reference only. This will not come with the manual or any software installation instructions. This will not come with any power cables. Please ensure you have the correct tools, software, hardware and skills to install and configure this unit before purchasing. 


Model number: P2379-C02-S0692

The Drive unit measures 14.5" x 9"(including the connector) x 4"

The Liquid Cooling Reservoir measures 13" x 8.25" (including connection) x 5.5"

Both units together weigh 19.4 lbs.


From the manufacturer


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia_Drive#cite_note-9


The Nvidia Drive PX 2 is based on one or two Tegra X2 SoCs where each SoC contains 2 Denver cores, 4 ARM A57 cores and a GPU from the Pascal generation.[8] There are two real world board configurations:

  • for AutoCruise: 1× Tegra X2 + 1 Pascal GPU
  • for AutoChauffeur: 2× Tegra X2 + 2 Pascal GPU's

There is further the proposal from Nvidia for fully autonomous driving by means of combining multiple items of the AutoChauffeur board variant and connecting these boards using e.g. UART, CAN, LIN, FlexRay, USB, 1 Gbit Ethernet or 10 Gbit Ethernet. For any derived custom PCB design the option of linking the Tegra X2 Processors via some PCIe bus bridge is further available, according to board block diagrams that can be found on the web.

All Tesla Motors vehicles manufactured from mid-October 2016 include a Drive PX 2, which will be used for neural net processing to enable Enhanced Autopilot and full self-driving functionality.[9] Other applications are Roborace.[10] Disassembling the Nvidia-based control unit from a recent Tesla car showed that a Tesla was using a modified single-chip Drive PX 2 AutoCruise, with a GP106 GPU added as a MXM Module. The chip markings gave strong hints for the Tegra X2 Parker as the CPU SoC.[11][12]

"Nvidia was selling the system to OEMs for their development programs at $15,000 per unit earlier this year." 

Setup Manual 

https://docs.nvidia.com/drive/active/5.0.10.3L/nvvib_docs/index.html#page/NVIDIA%2520DRIVE%2520Linux%2520SDK%2520Development%2520Guide%2Fboard_hardware_dpx2.html%23wwconnect_header