Hello everyone
I'm currently in the market for a NAS. I'm looking for a 2 drives bay. There are plenty of options so I thought I might ask what the people think.
Here's what I'm looking for:
I've been looking for the past days and did come out with 2 models that I really like :
Now I don't know if we could say that these 2 NAS are in the same range. The QNAP is much more expensive here in Canada, but according to the charts on SNB, it is 2 times faster than the Netgear. I was looking at the QNAP features yesterday and I know I would be paying for some features that I would never use. I don't need to be able to record from a wireless camera...
Anyway, the NAS I want to get will be used for 2 things only. Download stuff remotely (FTP/HTTP and BitTorrent) and stream videos to my PS3. I might use it for a webserver one day, but it is not a requirement for the NAS. The maximum users that might be connected to the NAS is 3 (including the PS3). At the moment, there would be less than 1TB on the NAS. I will always use RAID 1, and I currently already own 1TB drive so I would just need another one to enable the RAID 1. But at the beginning, the NAS might be running on only 1 drive until I buy the other one.
I looked at Synology, which are very great NAS. I guess you could compare them to QNAP. However, all Synology in my price range do not have hard drive trays. This means that I would have to open the NAS to replace a drive, which means shutting it down. I don't want that. So Synology is gone from my list.
I want something reliable, with a good software. I want to be able to let the NAS do its stuff when it is setup, without having to worry about it and make sure that the RAID is working. I don't mind paying extra bucks for the QNAP if it is more "future proof" and might last me longer.
Which one would you recommend between the 2 models I wrote above ? I know the Netgear would do the job, it is not intensive work that is done on my network. Hell, I was able to stream a DivX to my PS3 using a USB hard drive on my router that reads 5MB/s ! However I want the NAS to be fast and available when I need it.
I also thought about the Buffalo Linkstation Duo. It seems to be a very great product, however one feature let me down from it : It's not a BYOD NAS. I've read that the hard drives contains part of the NAS OS and I don't like it at all. If all the HDs fail in NAS, what happens then? I know the QNAP isn't like that, but what about the Netgear ?
I'm just trying to get some pros and cons for each from the community. Reviews are nice, but hearing from people that owns them for some time is always useful. I'm thinking of getting the NAS during the next month, so no rush. But I like to plan ahead !
Thanks !
Neo.
I'm currently in the market for a NAS. I'm looking for a 2 drives bay. There are plenty of options so I thought I might ask what the people think.
Here's what I'm looking for:
- RAID 1
- Possibility to use only 1 drive and then put a second drive later to enable RAID 1
- Possibility to increase the capacity of the NAS in the future (ie. replace one drive at a time)
- Hard Drives tray to be able to replace easily the drives while the unit is turned on
- Can support 2TB hard drives
- Probably gonna be 3.5" hd
- BitTorrent/FTP/HTTP download management
- Gigabit card
- DLNA certified
- Some kind of power management feature to turn it off during the night
- Possibly, but not mandatory, a Wake On Lan feature to awake the NAS
I've been looking for the past days and did come out with 2 models that I really like :
- Netgear ReadyNAS Duo
- QNAP TS-219P
Now I don't know if we could say that these 2 NAS are in the same range. The QNAP is much more expensive here in Canada, but according to the charts on SNB, it is 2 times faster than the Netgear. I was looking at the QNAP features yesterday and I know I would be paying for some features that I would never use. I don't need to be able to record from a wireless camera...
Anyway, the NAS I want to get will be used for 2 things only. Download stuff remotely (FTP/HTTP and BitTorrent) and stream videos to my PS3. I might use it for a webserver one day, but it is not a requirement for the NAS. The maximum users that might be connected to the NAS is 3 (including the PS3). At the moment, there would be less than 1TB on the NAS. I will always use RAID 1, and I currently already own 1TB drive so I would just need another one to enable the RAID 1. But at the beginning, the NAS might be running on only 1 drive until I buy the other one.
I looked at Synology, which are very great NAS. I guess you could compare them to QNAP. However, all Synology in my price range do not have hard drive trays. This means that I would have to open the NAS to replace a drive, which means shutting it down. I don't want that. So Synology is gone from my list.
I want something reliable, with a good software. I want to be able to let the NAS do its stuff when it is setup, without having to worry about it and make sure that the RAID is working. I don't mind paying extra bucks for the QNAP if it is more "future proof" and might last me longer.
Which one would you recommend between the 2 models I wrote above ? I know the Netgear would do the job, it is not intensive work that is done on my network. Hell, I was able to stream a DivX to my PS3 using a USB hard drive on my router that reads 5MB/s ! However I want the NAS to be fast and available when I need it.
I also thought about the Buffalo Linkstation Duo. It seems to be a very great product, however one feature let me down from it : It's not a BYOD NAS. I've read that the hard drives contains part of the NAS OS and I don't like it at all. If all the HDs fail in NAS, what happens then? I know the QNAP isn't like that, but what about the Netgear ?
I'm just trying to get some pros and cons for each from the community. Reviews are nice, but hearing from people that owns them for some time is always useful. I'm thinking of getting the NAS during the next month, so no rush. But I like to plan ahead !
Thanks !
Neo.