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Forum Discussion
BilboD
Feb 25, 2019Aspirant
Tray adaptator for SSD
I am planning on upgrading my ReadyNAS Duo to SSD. I have noted that all current models come with trays pre-drilled to accommodate 2.5" SSDs. However my ReadyNAS Duo has trays that only have fixing...
- Feb 26, 2019
Sandshark wrote:
Can anyone even confirm that the firmware for the Duo supports SSD's?
AFAIK there is no special support for SSDs. So no use of TRIM, etc. I don't think you'd get any warning when the wear leveling count becomes critical.
Sandshark wrote:
There are adapters designed for use in servers instead of PC's that could work. They are typically designed to use side screws to mount in the caddy, so you'd have to attach them with something else, like silicon glue (the non acid type)..
I've seen some mounting brackets too. Most of the ones out there now support two SSDs, which won't fit the way you need them to. But there are some that might work with some effort (including solving the problem of how to attach them to the tray).
Though as I've said, IMO I don't think this is worth the trouble. Power savings are small, 2 TB SSDs are still quite expensive, and I'd be worried about not getting notifications when the drives approach their write limit.
Marc_V
Feb 25, 2019NETGEAR Employee Retired
Hi BilboD
Your ReadyNAS Duo tray should have mounting points underneath it where you can mount your SSD.
Are you saying there are no holes on your disk tray like this? You may want to try and contact Support as the trays might be available for purchase. You can login to my.netgear.com to contact them.
Hope this helps!
Regards
StephenB
Feb 25, 2019Guru - Experienced User
You could possibly find a mounting bracket that would fit the tray.
Though I wouldn't bother doing this with a duo v1. It's large-file transfer speed is limited by it's CPU, so the performance gain won't be huge. You'd be better off getting an RN212 or RN422.
- BilboDFeb 25, 2019Aspirant
I also am running a ReadyNAS 102 which is suitable for PnP upgrade to SSD. The main thought for switching to SSD in the Duo is energy saving as there is no "spin up" drain and there is nowhere near as much energy used for read/write operations. Also as there would be no moving parts then there should be a significant thermal benefit from using SSD's.
The Netgear site has no obvious accessory for purchasing replacement trays for the Duo, although I have found one very dodgy web posting on how to shoehorns in an SSD onto the existing tray, but that ends up forcing a flexure on the connectors on the circuit board, not something I really would like to do.
Yes there a great many adapter mountings to fit a 2.5" SSD into a 3.5" HDD tray. However these are all designed to fit in a computer HDD 3.5" mounting bay. As the power and SATA connectors are cables not fittings mounted permanently to a circuit board they are fine. With the "hot swap" trays in the Duou then the physical location of the SATA and Power connectors on the SSD have to mate exactly with the connectors on the internal circuit board. Using an adapter would throw this alignment off completely.
- Marc_VFeb 25, 2019NETGEAR Employee Retired
One option would be to exchange trays with your RN102.
- BilboDFeb 25, 2019Aspirant
The ReadyNAS 102 trays on gross visual inspection appear to be of slightly different dimensions to the ReadyNAS Duo trays. Also I need the current trays in the ReadyNAS 102 to take SSD's for that enclosure.
Thank you for your comment though.
- StephenBFeb 25, 2019Guru - Experienced User
BilboD wrote:
The main thought for switching to SSD in the Duo is energy saving as there is no "spin up" drain and there is nowhere near as much energy used for read/write operations. Also as there would be no moving parts then there should be a significant thermal benefit from using SSD's.
In general, the energy savings aren't as great as many people assume.
Personally I wouldn't do it in my own Duo. It's just used for back up now, and is only powered up for about hour a day (with spindown enabled). Even if it were on 24x7, the power savings over the lifetime of the drives wouldn't pay back the extra cost of 2 TB SSDs.
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