Is 2 drives NAS concept fundamentally wrong? Single drive NAS relies on one hard disk to be healthy. 3+ drives use one of RAID levels tolerating one or more drives failure or data corruption. 2 drives concept is based on incorrect assumption that SMART and/or NAS is capable to detect every disk data corruption or failure.
2 drives NAS is even less reliable than 1 drive NAS, as it needs two healthy disks to operate error free. If one drive in 2 drives NAS corrupts data, and the failure is by its nature not detectable by SMART, data integrity is lost; it is not possible to prevent copying corrupted data across disks.
In summary we have the following situation:
2 drives NAS is even less reliable than 1 drive NAS, as it needs two healthy disks to operate error free. If one drive in 2 drives NAS corrupts data, and the failure is by its nature not detectable by SMART, data integrity is lost; it is not possible to prevent copying corrupted data across disks.
In summary we have the following situation:
- 1 drive: no protection against data corruption
- 2 drives: as above, but reliability is decreased, both disks need to be healthy
- 3 and more drives: depending on RAID level and how many drives, protects against data corruption on one or more disks