Aloha,
I'm contemplating re-doing my bench machine setup. I currently have a 4 TB "drive" that is actually 4 x 2TB RAID 10 array on a Windows 10 machine. The RAID array is defined using the Intel controller on the motherboard. This drive is used primarily to store customer backups.
I'm thinking in my new setup that I will put these drives into a NAS device, and I have a couple of questions...
1) Is there a NAS device that would allow me to just physically move the drives from my Win10 workstation to the NAS and have them work? Or will I have to offload the data and then reload once the NAS is up and running? (I think the answer is offload and reload, but thought I would ask.)
2) Is anyone willing to recommend a NAS device? Obviously, it has to have at least 4 drive bays (3.5") and support RAID 10. Since all I will be using this for is backup, I don't really need a lot of features like DLNA server and cloud sharing, etc. The drives I have are all WD Black WD2003FZEX 3.5" drives
3) I could double the size of my available disk space by switching from RAID 10 to RAID 0. Theoretically, in a RAID 0 array, you can lose one drive, replace it, and rebuild the array without loss of data. How well does this work in the real world?
Mahalo,
Harry Z.
I'm contemplating re-doing my bench machine setup. I currently have a 4 TB "drive" that is actually 4 x 2TB RAID 10 array on a Windows 10 machine. The RAID array is defined using the Intel controller on the motherboard. This drive is used primarily to store customer backups.
I'm thinking in my new setup that I will put these drives into a NAS device, and I have a couple of questions...
1) Is there a NAS device that would allow me to just physically move the drives from my Win10 workstation to the NAS and have them work? Or will I have to offload the data and then reload once the NAS is up and running? (I think the answer is offload and reload, but thought I would ask.)
2) Is anyone willing to recommend a NAS device? Obviously, it has to have at least 4 drive bays (3.5") and support RAID 10. Since all I will be using this for is backup, I don't really need a lot of features like DLNA server and cloud sharing, etc. The drives I have are all WD Black WD2003FZEX 3.5" drives
3) I could double the size of my available disk space by switching from RAID 10 to RAID 0. Theoretically, in a RAID 0 array, you can lose one drive, replace it, and rebuild the array without loss of data. How well does this work in the real world?
Mahalo,
Harry Z.