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Forum Discussion
VincentNguyenQu
Feb 04, 2013Star
RND4000-200 vs RNDU6000 general questions
Good morning, I'm currently revisiting my NAS setup, with the objective of reducing power consumption while keeping a decent level of performance (my current setup is a full blown server, with an L...
TeknoJnky
Feb 04, 2013Hero
- I don't, but I would not expect a whole of difference, and what difference there is would be the extra drives and bigger cpu. I can't imagine that it would be significant though.
- it would be dependent on the drives themselves, I would expect most drives to spin up within 5-15 seconds.
- yes both support 3+ tb drives, note however there are currently 2 types of expansion limits;
-- an 8 tb expansion limit, meaning from whatever initial size volume, the current max expansion is original volume + 8tb
-- 16tb volume size limit, in order to have larger than 16tb volume, you must currently factory default with all disks in place and restore data from backup
- the raid formats are compatible across the same cpu architecture, so x86 devices are compatible with each other, sparc devices are compatible with each other, ARM devices are compatible with each other. X86 are not compatible with ARM or SPARc, nor are ARM and SPARc compatible.
- all readynas store the OS/config on the disks, so you can migrate the disks to a replacement or different (compatible) device and they should work fine, providing there are no problems with the disks themselves.
- it would be dependent on the drives themselves, I would expect most drives to spin up within 5-15 seconds.
- yes both support 3+ tb drives, note however there are currently 2 types of expansion limits;
-- an 8 tb expansion limit, meaning from whatever initial size volume, the current max expansion is original volume + 8tb
-- 16tb volume size limit, in order to have larger than 16tb volume, you must currently factory default with all disks in place and restore data from backup
- the raid formats are compatible across the same cpu architecture, so x86 devices are compatible with each other, sparc devices are compatible with each other, ARM devices are compatible with each other. X86 are not compatible with ARM or SPARc, nor are ARM and SPARc compatible.
- all readynas store the OS/config on the disks, so you can migrate the disks to a replacement or different (compatible) device and they should work fine, providing there are no problems with the disks themselves.
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