Hi everybody
TL:DR How many drives in which RAID makes sense for a new NAS build?
I hope this is interesting enough for you to read through and to write your opinion.
Thank you in advance.
My Synology NAS has a (1) dead HDD (2 x 4TB) so I have to get a new HDD. While fixing I’d like to upgrade to futureproof but my Syno NAS can’t handle more than 4TB per HDD (according to spec).
That’s why I’m thinking about a new one but a prebuild is somewhat expensive and I’d like to build the things by myself.
Because I’m rack mounting all new devices, I found a case (Fantec SRC-2012X07) that can hold up to 12 3.5" HDDs. The HDDs in mind are around 12TB, right now I don’t have the data to fill even one HDD but as I said, I want to build for the future where we will have even more and bigger data stored.
Right now I backed up data roughly around 4TB, so I think 2x 12TB HDD in RAID 1 would be plenty, I’d prefer a RAID 5 with 3 drives to begin with. But as soon as I want to upgrade the space and add more drives, I need to backup all data before I can wipe the previous RAID and build the new one.
As an example how I understand it:
I have a RAID 1 with 2x 12TB (lets say 10TB in total storage), the space is used with 10TB of data.
To be able to build a RAID 5 with 3 drives I have to backup first those 10TB on another drive an then build the RAID 5 with the 3 drives. That means I need at this point 4 drives.
Is that correct? Is there a better way?
Thanks for reading through and I hope you can write me your opinions about this.
I live in Switzerland and I’m using www.digitec.ch most of the time because they have a pretty good filtering system.
Cheers
More spindles means better performance. But also more power use. Only you can decide which is more important.
And also means more initial cost to buy drives I don’t really need right now.
My worries are to have to backup a pool of, lets say 30TB (I don’t know if I every have this many data), and need first a storage solution to upgrade my original storage. But maybe it’s better to let my future self to solve this issue.