As a plus, if you run them on ZFS with de-dup, even the disk cost for new machines is miniscule.
Darn already. For I was thinking to myself: "Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these!".
[1] https://www.proxmox.com/en/products/proxmox-virtual-environm...
Pay attention to your SRAM (L3 unified cache), DRAM and swap space tilings.
[Snark] In practice: With memory access latency depending on both the square root of the memory size and the physical lengths of the wires in your cluster this sounds like a case for Adam Drake:
https://adamdrake.com/command-line-tools-can-be-235x-faster-...
The "problem" with Pi-like devices is that they're usually not very "normal". The process of provisioning is different, IIRC they only "recently" supported booting off something other than the SD Card, and in the case of the Zeros, you'll either be using Wifi or an external USB Ethernet dongle (over USB OTG no less). Sometimes they need specially compiled version of linux, so you're stuck far from mainline (this was a big component of the RPis success) This may be distracting from your goals of learning about clustering.
I suspect the $10 Pi Zero is about as cheap as you'll get though, depending on your personal costs of case + ethernet dongle + USB power supply, etc.
Actually, you raise a good point: I should spend some time browsing the Armbian supported hardware list...
Intel NUC's are probably much better value for money these days but the 3B's were pretty cheap at the time I bought them.