Tech Junky
Part of the Furniture
So, I've been thinking about this more lately and finally scratched the itch.
I have my DIY setup running as a router / AP / etc. + NAS / HTPC / OTA with 5*8TB drives in a Raid 10 configuration.
I've been thinking about converting it over to some sort of SSD configuration though to be more efficient. Not that I need the speed really most of the time even though the HDD's push 400MB/s+ as they spin right now. However dropping the system weight from 15# of drives to less than 1# using M2's is appealing for being able to move it around easier. Maybe find a lighter weight case now that I don't need a HDD rack inside for the drives.
Anyway, I spotted a MSI MPG Z790 Edge WiFi DDR4 on Amazon "used" for $193 shipped. Snagged it since it will be more cos effective than dealing with a high end PLX card offering full drive speed @ $600. I figure for less than the price of a single drive I can handle a new MOBO. The quantity of drives going up under the Z790 banner makes this easier to do with M2's. running through a list of 5xM2 boards there's a limited selection and most disable sockets and don't allow for full use of all of them at the same time. I would have preferred to stick with ASRock but, they full under this issue of disablement. I don't trust the other options that popped up as having the # of sockets I'm looking for. I've used MSI in the past and they were rock solid until I needed something a bit more niche that they didn't offer.
Next up was picking drives. I looked through quite a few options but, a price point I was trying to stick to was $200/drive @ 4TB. Next was speed since it doesn't make sense to go with a slower drive if you can get a better one for the same price. Some of the drives though had some gotchas when looking through reviews. One mentioned speed dropped under 1GB/s after filling it up x%. Another one was iffy on durability and several were showing failures prior to a year of use. I narrowed it down to
Kingston had more reviews but, 1/2 the speed. Lexar is a bit vague on which controller they're using but, google fu brings up some reasonable idea of it being a SM based option.
I've been using WD primarily for all things data though and have tried other options over the years that work but, just didn't give that performance feel. Switching things up though from spinning rust to SSD should provide plenty of snappiness even w/o the bulk data hoarding ability for the time being. If I really need the space I could switch things up from R10 to R5 or cough up the cash for higher capacity options. But, 4x4TB drives for the price of a single 8TB makes more sense. There's always the idiot idea of running all 4 drives in R0 for 16TB of space but, I'm a little gun shy on the potential failure of a drive. I can't say I've had it happen yet but, then again I swap drives for testing purposes quite often before they really see heavy use degradation.
I have my DIY setup running as a router / AP / etc. + NAS / HTPC / OTA with 5*8TB drives in a Raid 10 configuration.
I've been thinking about converting it over to some sort of SSD configuration though to be more efficient. Not that I need the speed really most of the time even though the HDD's push 400MB/s+ as they spin right now. However dropping the system weight from 15# of drives to less than 1# using M2's is appealing for being able to move it around easier. Maybe find a lighter weight case now that I don't need a HDD rack inside for the drives.
Anyway, I spotted a MSI MPG Z790 Edge WiFi DDR4 on Amazon "used" for $193 shipped. Snagged it since it will be more cos effective than dealing with a high end PLX card offering full drive speed @ $600. I figure for less than the price of a single drive I can handle a new MOBO. The quantity of drives going up under the Z790 banner makes this easier to do with M2's. running through a list of 5xM2 boards there's a limited selection and most disable sockets and don't allow for full use of all of them at the same time. I would have preferred to stick with ASRock but, they full under this issue of disablement. I don't trust the other options that popped up as having the # of sockets I'm looking for. I've used MSI in the past and they were rock solid until I needed something a bit more niche that they didn't offer.
Next up was picking drives. I looked through quite a few options but, a price point I was trying to stick to was $200/drive @ 4TB. Next was speed since it doesn't make sense to go with a slower drive if you can get a better one for the same price. Some of the drives though had some gotchas when looking through reviews. One mentioned speed dropped under 1GB/s after filling it up x%. Another one was iffy on durability and several were showing failures prior to a year of use. I narrowed it down to
Lexar NM790 SSD 4TB / 7400MB/s ($824 shipped)
andKingston NV2 4TB M.2 2280 / 3500MB/s ($779 shipped)
Kingston had more reviews but, 1/2 the speed. Lexar is a bit vague on which controller they're using but, google fu brings up some reasonable idea of it being a SM based option.
I've been using WD primarily for all things data though and have tried other options over the years that work but, just didn't give that performance feel. Switching things up though from spinning rust to SSD should provide plenty of snappiness even w/o the bulk data hoarding ability for the time being. If I really need the space I could switch things up from R10 to R5 or cough up the cash for higher capacity options. But, 4x4TB drives for the price of a single 8TB makes more sense. There's always the idiot idea of running all 4 drives in R0 for 16TB of space but, I'm a little gun shy on the potential failure of a drive. I can't say I've had it happen yet but, then again I swap drives for testing purposes quite often before they really see heavy use degradation.