Drobo?

Skywise

DIS Veteran
Joined
Jul 24, 2013
Messages
3,037
Looking at setting up a NAS with some redundancy for photo/media storage and looking at the Drobo 5N. Anyone here have any experience with Drobos? (Other NAS'?)

I'll be content to just use it to store backups photos but it'd be nice if the performance is good enough to edit the photos (EG with Lightroom) as well. (I have a gigabit ethernet router so that particular aspect shouldn't be an issue)
 
I have a Western Digital NAS and it is as flaky as a box of cereal. It will copy a directory ok then on the next one it will quickly hang up so only powering it off will clear it up. I don't recommend it.
 
Here's a vid....

Warning today's terrabyte drive can take SEVERAL hours to recover/transfer.
 

Personally, I'd steer clear of Drobo. It pretends to be a backup in and of itself, but RAID isn't a true backup, and it's neigh on impossible to back up. Plus, it offers nothing that can't be done natively in Windows 8 or later with basic USB attached drives, which can be recovered easily if something goes wrong. If you want redundancy, Windows 8/8.1/10 can create it with any group of Firewire, SATA, SAS, USB, or pretty much any other kind of disk, just like Drobo does, without the Drobo expense, and with higher performance.

For me, I use a Windows Server with 4 TB Western Digital RE SAS drives with a hardware RAID 5 controller, and it recovers or rebuilds to add another drive in about 2-3 hours ... but that's overkill for most people ... then again, I use it also to serve up multiple DVD and Blu-Rays direct from the disks to my TVs, and can catalogue photos at the same time. Yes, I'm a geek. :P

Editing is pretty much out of the question over the network, even with my rig, unless you use iSCSI or Fibre Channel. You need block level access to photos, and SMB and similar only offer file-level access, so editing performance is terrible. What I do is edit on my local disk, then do a quick copy to the server.

You should also consider how you plan to back this all up. I use CrashPlan Pro unlimited, so it's constantly synced to the cloud, but in the Multi-TB realm you really do have to worry about this - do you end up picking up an 8 TB backup drive? Or the cloud? Or even tape?
 












Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE


New Posts





DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter DIS Bluesky

Back
Top Bottom