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Forum Discussion
wagwarnas
Jan 12, 2021Aspirant
NAS to replace Netgear ReadyNAS NV+
Hi, Can someone recommend a Readynas and drives? I need to replace my old Readynas NV+. I need about 4 tb of mirrored storage. Primay usage will be for photo files (2 TB) and about 1TB audio file...
wagwarnas
Jan 12, 2021Aspirant
Thank you for your quick response! I am using RaidX (I believe) and I have been very happy with that. I had a drive crash in my 4 bay NV+ and though I had to pay Netgear for tech supp, the tech was able to recover all of the data. I dont want to lose that. So my understanding is that is 2 drive volume with a 2 drive mirror. If that is not correct, let me know. I'm not sure what RaID LEVEL Raidx is.
I forgot to ask, what wireless protocols do the RN214 and 424 support? I have not found that info in the tech specs.
if my understanding is correct, I would need to populate the nas with 4 2TB ssd to get a 4tb volume. What SSD would you recommend or have you heard good things about?
Thank you.
mdgm
Jan 12, 2021Virtuoso
wagwarnas wrote:I'm not sure what RaID LEVEL Raidx is.
On Sparc it uses RAID-4 (unlike RAID-5 it has a dedicated parity disk rather than distributing parity amongst all the disks). On newer ReadyNAS it uses RAID-5.
wagwarnas wrote:I forgot to ask, what wireless protocols do the RN214 and 424 support? I have not found that info in the tech specs.
The NAS gets plugged in via ethernet to your router/switch. The wireless protocols are totally dependent on what your router and your client (e.g. laptop) support.
wagwarnas wrote:if my understanding is correct, I would need to populate the nas with 4 2TB ssd to get a 4tb volume. What SSD would you recommend or have you heard good things about?
2TB SSDs are not cheap. SSDs will make a performance difference most notably for "random" read/writes over the GbE interface of the RN214 and RN424, but if doing large sequential transfers you'd want to be using the 10GbE ethernet interface of e.g. a RN524X to see a big increase in speed. 10GBASE-T equipment still isn't cheap. You'd need a switch that supports it and a NIC in your PC.
For a lot of users hard drives are still the economical way to go. I have several ReadyNAS and haven't yet used a SSD in any of them.
- wagwarnasJan 12, 2021Aspirant
Thank you very much! I know that SSD are expensive, but I assume that an HDD would quickly fail in a high vibration and bumpy environment like a motorhome. I would have to shut it down to travel. I'd like to have it available while driving.
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