Spyke
lemmy.world

If there is one thing you shouldn't cheap out on imo it's the storage.

36

Then just get a pair of hard drives and put them in RAID 1. I use a NAS with a single hand-me-down 5600 RPM HDD and the bandwidth is absolutely fine.

10
Valmondreply
lemmy.mindoki.com

There is probably some iron triangle to be found there; cheap, large capacity ,reliable ; chose two.

14
Oversparkreply
feddit.nl

You can have all three of those, but you won't get great performance. The Samsung QVO SATA drives are a great example. I wouldn't use those for an OS drive but they're fantastic for NAS or media use.

5

Oh I agree with your post, but I was responding to Valmond who used different criteria.

5

Personally I have focused on fast SSD storage and utilized the vast, cheap, slow storage available with mechanical drives for backup.

At the end of the day, if an SSD fails, you're effectively just screwed. If a mechanical drive fails, there is some possibility that the data is recoverable. But moreover, mechanical storage is so cheap by volume that you can just have redundant backup and never worry about it, really.

14
Postcard64reply
lemmy.world

Only when they get to the end of life of the cells. If there's another failure before that, it's likely a full failure.

12
lemmy.sdf.org

To my knowledge, that isn't a consistent pattern (someone please correct if wrong).

2
lemmy.world

The point is to run TLC drives. SLC drives of that capacity are too expensive and are thus not recommended.

7
lemmy.world
  • SLC -> Single-Level Cell, i.e. 1 bit per cell
  • MLC -> Multi-Level Cell, i.e. 2 bits per cell
  • TLC -> Triple-Level Cell, i.e. 3 bits per cell
  • QLC -> Quad-Level Cell, i.e. 4 bits per cell

The more bits per cell you store, the more dense and therefore cheaper your flash chips can be for a give capacity. The downside is that it is slower and less reliable since you have to be able to write and read exponentially more voltage states per cell, e.g. 2 states for SLC, 4 states for MLC, 8 states for TLC, etc.

14

Careful with this- since MLC just means multi, I've seen drives marketed as "3-bit MLC", i.e. TLC

2
lemmy.world

WD Green /shrug

I’ve been using all Red Pros since I first built my nas, but it started with a couple of green 2TB that where in there for like 7 years before being replaced (didn’t die yet)

6
lemmy.world

I was using HDDs, and I believe it may have been a little less of an issue bc I had Unraid configured to keep the drives spun up (I’ve read the spin up is hard on the drive, not so much the time being spun up)

But I did occasionally have some IOWait issues. Reds plus a NVME cache has resolved all those issues.

4

Same, we're ones of dozens I'm sure but I've been running a mix of WD greens and Seagate barracudas in a hardware RAID5 array for over a decade. Only had 2 drive failures over the entire time with no data loss. But yeah... would advise against that if possible

1

Perhaps running a mirror or a stripe array would be more important than selecting drives that don't fail. Then you can pick whatever that's not complete garbage. That said, it would likely still be more expensive overall.

4
lemmy.world

Your local network is probably 1Gbit or 2.5Gbits so you’ll be good with SATA as an aux drive, say a Samsung 870 QVO. I’d recommend running a smaller NMVe as your main one.

4
asbestosreply
lemmy.world

I’d recommend the QVO for storage needs, and I’ve seen 8TB versions go for $400 so I’d say it’s insanely cheap considering it’s still an SSD and saturates the SATA protocol.

3

I have 8 of these in 4tb. They are wonderful and ive not had a single issue

1

Transcend ssd220s (4tb SATA) can be found for really nice prices.
Even had a thread about this one on Lemmy cuz I wasn't sure how good it is (it's great).

4
lemmy.world

Been using Sabrent Rocket SSDs for awhile. Been reliable and fast. They aren't the cheapest SSDs, but they perform well and don't break the bank.

3

My only Sabrent Rocket SSD i had started failing within 6 months. Got it in Jan, cut it into pieces and threw it away in June.

2
lemmy.ca

A SATA ADATA SU800 died on me after 4 years of use. (Luckily I had a weekly harddrive backup so I lost almost nothing! :D)

Samsung, WD, Lexar, Kingston generally are known reliable name brands (but Samsung warranty doesn't work well in Canada). If you watch ![email protected] like a hawk (Canada's PC part sales mirrored from Reddit) you may find the occasional deal that is at or under $50/TB Canadian (roughly 36 US$, 35€)

E:I noticed it hasn't posted in a couple days, wonder if it died or got banned

3

Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I've seen in this thread:

Fewer LettersMore Letters
NASNetwork-Attached Storage
NVMeNon-Volatile Memory Express interface for mass storage
RAIDRedundant Array of Independent Disks for mass storage
SATASerial AT Attachment interface for mass storage
SSDSolid State Drive mass storage

5 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 15 acronyms.

[Thread #356 for this sub, first seen 14th Dec 2023, 22:35] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

3
aussie.zone

I've been running a couple ADATA Nvme drives since 2019. No issues and they're fast.

2

ADATA nVme, SATA m.2 and SATA are my go to for cheap upgrades for laptops and have had no problems with them. Even have a few in external USB cases for large capacity, fast, portable storage and they work great.

1
lemmy.world

While it doesn't see much use (sporadic), my 'value' Adata nvme drive has been solid and performing as expected in my gaming laptop; also from 2019.

1

Running 2x ADATA XPG SX8200 Pro M.2 NVMe, 500Gb for OS and VMs and a 2Tb for games and documents.

I figured it was worth the gamble on this cheaper brand since everything important is synched/baked up to my server.

AAANNNDD that server is synched to my old NAS.

2

I use enterprise drives because they're cheaper and more reliable.

Got some 4TB enterprise NVMe for 150 each. They only had 3TB written, basically brand new.

2

I've heard good things about the netac n7000, (not the n7000t!), but I have not bit the bullet yet on buying one

1
Please recommend your cheaper, reliable SSDs 2TB+ (4TB ideal) | Spyke