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MobUK's avatar
MobUK
Aspirant
Jun 07, 2017
Solved

X-RAID implemantation

Hi. I've been reading up on the difference between NAS and ordinary hard drives and one thing that pops up is TLER.

I understand that it's only really relevant if RAID is done in hardware.

So can you tell me, is X-RAID a software or hardware raid in the ReadyNAS RND4200v2

 

Thanks

Mo

  • A few years ago NAS-purposed drives came out (WDC Red, Seagate Ironwolf).  Just use those instead of a consumer-grade drive.  Or of course use an enterprise-grade drive (including WDC Red Pro, Ironwolf Pro, among many others).

     

    Enterprise-grade will give the fastest performance.  Reliability is supposed to be better, but good data on that is hard to find.

     

    The NAS-purposed consumer grade are lower performing, although still fast enough to saturate a gigabit network connection.  They run cooler than enterprise-grade (using less power).


    MobUK wrote:

    I understand that it's only really relevant if RAID is done in hardware.

     


    I have seen some folks who say that, but they appear to be pretty dated articles.  So I wouldn't assume that is still true. Also there is some additional vibration control in NAS-purposed drives (which is helpful when you have multiple drives in the same chassis).


    MobUK wrote:

     

    So can you tell me, is X-RAID a software or hardware raid in the ReadyNAS RND4200v2

     


    Software raid.

     

2 Replies

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  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Guru - Experienced User

    A few years ago NAS-purposed drives came out (WDC Red, Seagate Ironwolf).  Just use those instead of a consumer-grade drive.  Or of course use an enterprise-grade drive (including WDC Red Pro, Ironwolf Pro, among many others).

     

    Enterprise-grade will give the fastest performance.  Reliability is supposed to be better, but good data on that is hard to find.

     

    The NAS-purposed consumer grade are lower performing, although still fast enough to saturate a gigabit network connection.  They run cooler than enterprise-grade (using less power).


    MobUK wrote:

    I understand that it's only really relevant if RAID is done in hardware.

     


    I have seen some folks who say that, but they appear to be pretty dated articles.  So I wouldn't assume that is still true. Also there is some additional vibration control in NAS-purposed drives (which is helpful when you have multiple drives in the same chassis).


    MobUK wrote:

     

    So can you tell me, is X-RAID a software or hardware raid in the ReadyNAS RND4200v2

     


    Software raid.

     

    • MobUK's avatar
      MobUK
      Aspirant

      Thanks Stephen. A very useful bunch of info. Much appreciated.

      Cheers

      Moby

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