Budget Storage Server 2022! | 84TB NAS

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Tech By Matt

Tech By Matt

2 жыл бұрын

Welcome to my latest video featuring my new 84tb storage server for 2022! Let me know what you think in the comments below!
Video sources mentioned:
Craft Computing TruNas tutorial: • TrueNAS CORE 12.0 Inst...
Parts Used:
z420 mobo on ebay: ebay.us/ewZlCK
Western Digital External Drives:
Newegg: bit.ly/3jjKxtH
Amazon: amzn.to/3uo9L0c
Boot SSD(Adata SU800):
Newegg: bit.ly/3NXiRsH
Amazon: amzn.to/3E16zej
ECC DDR3: ebay.us/TndGwV
Tech I use and recommend: lustre.ai/creator/tech-by-matt
-------------Social Media Links-------------------------------
Twitter: / techbymatt​​
SoundCloud: / ​​
Instagram: / ​​
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
~Personal Rig Specs(Amazon Links)~
Ryzen 7 1700: amzn.to/2By8zh5​​
Asrock AB350 ITX: amzn.to/2BvJCmw​​
Galax HOF DDR4 3200mhz: bit.ly/2wxmUVl​​
Zotac GTX 1070 ti Mini: amzn.to/2BuvCtb​​
Corsair SF450: amzn.to/2BgCrdI​​
~Music Credits:~
Background Music:
LAKEY INSPIRED
Track Name: "Better Days"
Music By: LAKEY INSPIRED @ / lakeyinspired​​
DISCLAIMER: All Amazon links are connected to my Amazon Associate account. I earn a small commision from each purchase without any increase in cost to you. All bitly links that go to Newegg are attached to my Newegg affiliate account.

Пікірлер: 737
@EngineerDJ_Julius
@EngineerDJ_Julius 6 ай бұрын
I love how 84TB is considered to be a "budget server"
@nocturnalpursuits1706
@nocturnalpursuits1706 2 жыл бұрын
my man earned his like on this one for the full hazmat suit 😂
@frostbyte9770
@frostbyte9770 2 жыл бұрын
Done like 😂
@quaz3214
@quaz3214 2 жыл бұрын
Video didn't even load yet but I'll leave a like too in that case
@sexualsmile
@sexualsmile Жыл бұрын
kzfaq.info/get/bejne/mdakadWDnNnJgoE.html finally its here
@reecepene6904
@reecepene6904 Жыл бұрын
1 like for the Naruto soundtrack and video editing 🤣
@mikel27._
@mikel27._ Жыл бұрын
kzfaq.infoJm-SUR6vPkQ?feature=share
@rcald-gz5jd
@rcald-gz5jd 2 жыл бұрын
*Matt* Yes, 10 gbps networking and SSD cache video in the future please. Thank you for producing this piece.
@Felix-ve9hs
@Felix-ve9hs 2 жыл бұрын
I don't think there is a way to use a SSD with ZFS / TrueNAS ...
@kyu3474
@kyu3474 2 жыл бұрын
@@Felix-ve9hs there is. When you create a pool you can select a cache drive. I'm using 4tb hard drives in my nas and a 500gb m.2 nvme ssd as cache
@xbadjokerx
@xbadjokerx 2 жыл бұрын
and by future he means next week. and by next week i mean now, as this video is already weeks old
@furmek
@furmek 2 жыл бұрын
@@kyu3474 Lawrence Systems has a good video on zfs caches, boils down to this: cache in ram has a order of magnitude lower latency than other options. You should start thinking about ssd/optane cache only if you get low hit rate for you ram cache. And as always it all depends on your use case, if you pull random video files and you watch them once cache won't help you much. If you run vm's or docker containers I would first max out ram and only when hit ratio drops would add l2arc. BTW Matt: did you pick TrueNas Core over Scale for a reason?
@Adam130694
@Adam130694 2 жыл бұрын
10GBit is to expensive, there are like $20-$25 2.5GBit network cards on PCI-e x1/USB3 which work with CAT. 5e cables. I don't think that any modern HDD will exceed ~300MiB/s even in RAID/ZFS.
@Diviance
@Diviance Жыл бұрын
The 3.3v pin isn't to prevent shucking. Those externals actually use that pin to hard reboot the drive if it freezes for some reason. A lot of NAS systems also support that pin to do the same thing. It has a purpose... it just isn't a widely used option in desktop systems, so they don't usually support that pin.
@supershad9855
@supershad9855 Жыл бұрын
9:18 WD doesn't do that to discourage people to shuck the drives. It's an actual enterprise feature, when you have multiple servers with 100s of drive each, you don't want them to spin up all of them once, with that pin number 3, you can schedule drives to spin up in order, so that you don't have massive power spike trying to turn on your servers by all the drives trying to spinning up at once.
@raidone7413
@raidone7413 Жыл бұрын
How do you know that
@naomiarmitage8729
@naomiarmitage8729 Жыл бұрын
@@raidone7413 many nas and enterprise hardware boot drives(and other devices with high load on the PSU/s ) one at a time or by pairs of them ,to avoid exactly the same ,power spikes are a dangerous and real problem due to power supplies features like overcurrent protection and overload protection. imagine the power spike if you boot 25 drives @15k RPM at the same time... . On the other side ,if they really would like to avoid shucking ,belive me there are easier ,cheaper and better options like firmware checks or propietary connectors instead of standart sata port on drives. in fact i shucked 4*8TB wd drives and i did nothing about the 3.3 pin ,cause my ASUSTOR nas use the drives without any mod :)
@MMMHOTCHEEZE
@MMMHOTCHEEZE Жыл бұрын
​@@raidone7413 Most of the bigger WD external drives are just using their enterprise internal drives. They used to not even replace the labels and were reds before switching to the white label like 3 or 4 years ago. Also the 3.3v pin feature just isn't compatible with most consumer brand PSUs, that's the reason they don't spin up.
@suraj_ag
@suraj_ag Жыл бұрын
@@raidone7413 This is the same reason why corps like google are making their own way to boot up their linux machines. cuz it take ages for each to spin up and bring to life.
@ktmcintyre
@ktmcintyre Жыл бұрын
As an enterprise storage admin for a global media company, when it comes to determining how many parity drives you want, you also want to take into account rebuild times and the potential to have another failure while you are rebuilding. The larger the drive, the longer the rebuild time.
@wanyelandy8847
@wanyelandy8847 Жыл бұрын
Yes, given 200MB/s-240MB/s read/write average like HC530(14TB), read/write all content on single drive will take about 1 day in full capacity. For HOME NAS, due to the number of drives, the rebuild process can be quite long. EC based solution like minio is much better than RAID based solution but I didn't see much NAS package provide that option.
@williambradford7748
@williambradford7748 Жыл бұрын
in addittion to a RAID rebuild putting more stress on the drives. Well said though.
@hhkk6155
@hhkk6155 Жыл бұрын
Yes, really long rebuild time + you have to have a spare drive to swap, and not wait on it being shipped
@jmasked5082
@jmasked5082 11 ай бұрын
With that in mind, what would you suggest? Less parity drives, or smaller drives? Both?
@3nertia
@3nertia 2 жыл бұрын
I applaud your integrity - and your technical prowess; thank you!
@claytonbaisley1756
@claytonbaisley1756 2 жыл бұрын
You can get rid of the front I/O errors by grounding the sense/ID pins on the motherboard headers. I'd suggest soldering small wires to the backside of the board under the header if you actually want to use the ports for your case's front I/O. If not, then just use some jumper wires to attach to the pins directly on the header. For the USB 2.0 header, short pin 10 to either pin 7 or 8. For the USB 3.0 header, short pin 10 to any of the following: 4, 7, 13, 17. For the Audio header. short pins 2 and 4. For the 1394 Firewire, HP used a proprietary header, so you'll need to either plug in an HP front I/O module and stuff it somewhere in the case, or search the forums to see if anyone reverse engineered the pinout so you can know which pins to short. As for the fans well, just add a couple case fans and use those headers.
@Epoustoufflante
@Epoustoufflante 2 жыл бұрын
You're a life saver - I've been looking for this information desperately Edit: Some more research yielded this video, which is also useful - kzfaq.info/get/bejne/mZ53bJp30a-WgXU.html
@timothykooiman9236
@timothykooiman9236 2 жыл бұрын
Hp proprietary IO is the wrench in this build. Also, a thermal sensor is present on the HP Z workstations that need to remain plugged into the mobo for transplant viability.
@bahraenimayoof7836
@bahraenimayoof7836 9 ай бұрын
I watched your older video, and I'm very happy to see this update.. I can't wait to see you making more home server videos
@lucasmedina420
@lucasmedina420 2 жыл бұрын
I've been looking for a server video like this and haven't been able to find any good ones. This is exactly what I was looking for. Tha k you for the content. It was a super good video!
@JadeIsler
@JadeIsler Жыл бұрын
building a NAS as I watch this; amazingly in the exact same case also bought used local for the same reasons as you. I love the component selection, like you said you're way more about it than the big boi yters. Was able to snag eight 4TB Seagate 5900RPM Skyhawk drives for $35 per, paired with an X299 MSI Raider board ($120 used local), and a $200 ebay i9-7900X cooled by a $40 ThermalRight FC140 that performs neck to neck with an NHD-15. Nowhere near your 84TB but your hoarding habit is worse than mine. Subbed, hype for more!
@bendavis1643
@bendavis1643 5 ай бұрын
This video was worth liking just for the PC-Cleaning-Jutsu. But on a more serious note, it's nice to see people doing practical builds that a wider audience can make themselves. Great work.
@rpelzer
@rpelzer 2 жыл бұрын
Interestingly enough, Western Digital is currently (April 2022) pushing out a lot of both Red Pro and Gold 16TB drives for $299.00... they must be getting ready to release a newer, larger capacity drive and need the warehouse space.
@ghost-user559
@ghost-user559 Жыл бұрын
Just don’t get anything but red pro. Anything below that is junk now
@quazar912
@quazar912 Жыл бұрын
@@ghost-user559 not really
@ghost-user559
@ghost-user559 Жыл бұрын
@@quazar912 Yes they have a different design for drives that is incapable of being used in a raid array or Nas. They literally got caught using inferior drives without telling customers about it. After that they “promised” that they would keep the Pro line as the only line with raid and Nas compatibility.
@tjhana
@tjhana Жыл бұрын
@@ghost-user559 How about WD Red Plus ?
@ghost-user559
@ghost-user559 Жыл бұрын
@@tjhana I think it’s only the pro they kept the quality of. Look up “SMR drives”. And read people’s experiences and horror stories. They have a very slow transfer speed once you get to a certain amount of data. It’s like they will seem fine but then take 14 hours transferring data that should have taken 4 hours. They can’t be raided or used in a NAS as a result. Only the Pro is the original quality.
@RAZY03
@RAZY03 2 жыл бұрын
Ur videos are real gold man. So much detail ....
@LannisterKing
@LannisterKing 5 ай бұрын
love your video dude. have been working with servers for 20+ years they are so much fun you gained a subscriber
@kevinpitts9014
@kevinpitts9014 Жыл бұрын
Dude! You have inspired me!! I have watched this video before but didn't realize the motherboard. I have had a 420 system for 10 years now. I upgraded the CPU to e5-2660(?) and up to 24gigs. After transferring it to another case, I did have to get the adapter cable for the power. I have found that if you jump certain pins on the front USB, firewire, etc., those errors go away on startup. If you want the fans not to ramp up, pins 11, 12, and 5 are a thermal sensor. I found mine in the original case and ripped it out, soooooooo much quite! Thanks again for your hard work.
@PoeLemic
@PoeLemic Жыл бұрын
Damn, Matt ... You are freaking hilarious ... 6:18 ... I loved that brief intermission of humor, creativity, and ingenuity ... Glad I subbed. Haven't watched much lately, but I'll come back & keep up.
@nicolebee2810
@nicolebee2810 2 жыл бұрын
Okay the " PC Cleaning Jutsu" part was completely unexpected and absolutely phenomenal.
@MrConstruction36
@MrConstruction36 2 жыл бұрын
The cleaning jutsu.... laughed my butt off you have a new subscriber now......
@marinrealestatephotography
@marinrealestatephotography Жыл бұрын
Hi Matt: Thanks for the video. I am looking to archive a lot of 4K video footage and am just now exploring storage options. So I really appreciate the info you presented in the video. Thanks again.
@danw1955
@danw1955 3 ай бұрын
HP workstation boards like the Z-400 and Z-420, etc. are notorious for hanging on boot if you don't have all the hardware connected that was originally in the workstation. On the fan headers, you can jumper one of the pins to ground to fool it into thinking the proper fan is connected. On the front USB, and front 1394 error, it's easiest to keep the front USB/1394 cluster and cables, and connect it and just stuff it in the case somewhere. I used a Z-400 board in a nice build with a Lian Li all aluminum full tower case, and ran into these very same issues. With the Z-400, I found that the m/b tray from the original workstation is the best way to mount the board into an alternate case, as it already has the I/O shield integrated into the tray, and the mounts for the CPU cooler, and it will make all the ports and slots line up where they should be, in a generic case.😉 Hope this helps.
@mfurquimdev
@mfurquimdev 7 ай бұрын
Thumb's up for covering the 3rd pin with tape. Really useful information.
@demanuDJ
@demanuDJ 9 ай бұрын
as for now, its the best home NAS build, cheap with a lot of features. thank you
@Baylough.Technologies
@Baylough.Technologies Жыл бұрын
I was actually looking at this same case for my future NAS build. Love the way everything is setup in these things. Awesome video man!🏆
@noahemmitt
@noahemmitt Жыл бұрын
Name of the case? I couldn’t understand what he was calling the case
@Baylough.Technologies
@Baylough.Technologies Жыл бұрын
@@noahemmitt Fractal Design Define R5 I believe
@chrislim6104
@chrislim6104 11 ай бұрын
@@noahemmitt Fractal Design Define R4 (Turning on CC (Closed Caption) is great!)
@psadlkfpsk
@psadlkfpsk Жыл бұрын
I only subscribe to a new channel like once every 2 years. You earned a sub for the pc cleaning jutsu.
@james2749
@james2749 2 жыл бұрын
Would love to see a video about setting up things like next cloud on the server as well as a game server and how you set up your modem to allow traffic from outside while keeping your data safe!
@songsan807
@songsan807 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I have a PC that I build around 2012 in a big Cooler Master Tower case with i7 CPU that was very fast and just stopped using about a month ago. It was using 10 drives for 40TB. Now I am thinking of repurpose that as a NAS setup like yours.
@MattEatsMochi
@MattEatsMochi Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad there's another Matt out there who made their server IP end in .69 as well :D
@ramapullareddy
@ramapullareddy Жыл бұрын
Nice video, was really helpful and easy to follow. Looking forward to upgrades to the box and possibly would you be considering using truenas scale to fully utilize upgraded machine? Thanks
@JockMcBile
@JockMcBile Жыл бұрын
Very cool. I'm looking into making my own NAS, but I only have 3, 3TB HDD and 2, 12 TB HDD. I enjoyed this video and learned a lot.
@rickb3288
@rickb3288 Жыл бұрын
Was looking at buying an off the shelf storage server, but wanted to see if a DIY project was within my scope. Thanks to your insight and excellent presentation skills, looks like I will go down the DIY path and save some major $$$. Thank you so much!
@wanyelandy8847
@wanyelandy8847 Жыл бұрын
Yes, NAS servers are over-price and low spec. The worst part is that they are limited and expensive in extending drive capacity. The 4 bay extension can be sold at $500 or more, this can cost almost 60% of hard drive. This is ridiculous. The rack mount chassis is too loud to be used as HOME NAS. TBH, any NAS vendor should provide option for new drive extension in less than $20. That fits the nature of home NAS(incremental/annual spending without much planning)
@gamedetective3920
@gamedetective3920 11 ай бұрын
Very interesting and insightful. You put in a lot of work on this build. I have been considering doing the same thing myself. Just haven't made the jump yet.
@JediBuddhist
@JediBuddhist 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Another Good video. Straight to the point with sum LoLz 🙏
@chrisumali9841
@chrisumali9841 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the demo and info. I have version 1 running in my garage, great build. I might have to build v2 to run truenas scale. Have a great day
@cutterboard4144
@cutterboard4144 2 жыл бұрын
Quite a good video, and the first one i saw that adresses the active-low pin on salvaged USB hard drives. Ive build a NAS myself a few Months back with a "Node 804" Case which supports 8 hanging HDs in a small form factor (though i had to print out an additional fan holder for in between the HD cages because the disks got too warm). In the end i installed 9 HDDs for storage and one m.2 for the OS. Since our electricity is the most expensive in the world (0,3 - 0,35 €/kWh -> ~0.35 USD/kWh) i cant let it run 24/7, so i configured it with WOL (Wake on Lan). If i need the storage, i simply ping it with a "magic packet", and when im done i execute a special ssh script which logs into the machine and shuts it down. a bit of work in the beginning, but easy to use once its all configured.
@ttomkins4867
@ttomkins4867 2 жыл бұрын
The power disable pin is part of the sata spec. The general intent is by using supporting controllers to remotely hard reset or shutdown drives in the same way pulling the power would. Drives intended for retail do not have the feature as they are directly connected to the power supply, thus the pin would be always active and the drive wouldn't turn on. Drive manufactures make both drives with and without power disable, and distribute to the appropriate channels. When these portable drives are made whatever is available is used. This is why you can end up with an assortment of drive types, and in your case some with and without power disable. Don't know how they choose the drives, maybe what ever if coming off the line, or the one there is excess of, or even the ones that are slightly under preforming, but the ones with power disable are likely better as they where not originally destined for the retail market. Shucking already voids the warranty, if they cared to stop the practice they would just use a custom firmware that would only work with the adapter or even go further and pair the two as that would defeat flashing a normal firmware to the drive.
@shanez1215
@shanez1215 2 жыл бұрын
Ah, so does the USB adapter in the WD shell set that pin to ground? Or just not connect it at all?
@PeterBrockie
@PeterBrockie 2 жыл бұрын
The real problem isn't shucked WD drives powering off, it's damn PSU manufactures STILL putting a 3.3v rail on their SATA cables. I have no idea why almost all PSUs still do it, when it has been depreciated. First thing I do when I get a new PSU (after testing) is remove the wire from all the included SATA cables. I hate getting screwed by a cable with 3.3v when I don't realize right away the damn cable is just disabling the drive. :D
@comedyclub333
@comedyclub333 2 жыл бұрын
@@PeterBrockie I don't know, but isn't it there for compatibility reasons? I would guess that some old hardware still requires this 3.3V rail. Just because modern devices (including drives) step down the voltage onboard doesn't mean it's not part of the spec or it's not necessary for some devices.
@PeterBrockie
@PeterBrockie 2 жыл бұрын
@@comedyclub333 Molex connectors use 12v + 5v. When SATA came around I think the idea was to add 3.3v since a lot of ICs ran 3.3v instead of 5v at the time, and they could just directly run off that rail. But what ended up happening is essentially zero devices used the 3.3v rail because ICs got lower and lower in voltage (modern CPUs are under a volt) and it was easier to just use a local power regulator to change the 5v into 1.2v or whatever. CPUs use 12v input and your VRM lowers it to the ~0-2v (depending on hardware). They changed the spec into making it a shutdown pin simply because it was never actually used in drives. I have no idea why PSUs still have it other than they are often based on older designs (I don't think even motherboards use 3.3v these days).
@Mr.Leeroy
@Mr.Leeroy 2 жыл бұрын
@@PeterBrockie 95-99% of ICs are 3.3v nowadays. CPUs & GPUs are forced to use lower voltage because there are billions - trillions transistors inside that all add up to hundreds of amps current consumption. The higher the voltage, the more power draw and thus heat, less efficient they are. It is only more expensive to produce lower voltage logic ICs because it requires much smaller physical transistor sizes and expensive fabs.
@CozumelTy
@CozumelTy 28 күн бұрын
This is a great guide! Thank you!
@nickcorr7244
@nickcorr7244 Жыл бұрын
Great vid Matt, looks like a great project.
@lewddrip5383
@lewddrip5383 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Very entertaining and relaxing to watch.
@nickhenley8040
@nickhenley8040 2 жыл бұрын
This route suits me more than a blade type server. Thanks for this and I will be interested to see any updates for this as well.
@nickhenley8040
@nickhenley8040 2 жыл бұрын
This seems like a scam. What is the stuff to win?
@Davvechan
@Davvechan Жыл бұрын
Would love to see more on this server! Love that you bought alot of used hardware! Was the hdd new or used?
@KillerTacos54
@KillerTacos54 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video Matt!
@fram1111
@fram1111 Жыл бұрын
Nice work and keeping it down to earth
@drcyb3r
@drcyb3r Жыл бұрын
I just built a NAS myself. I used a Microserver Gen8 for it as I could get it relatively cheap and I wanted remote management and a compact design. I used the SCALE-version of TrueNAS as it runs on top of Linux and you can use Dockers and VMs there. And if I find another server of the same model for cheap, I could even connect them together. Also I can recommend using a Ventoy stick if you have a bigger stick and want to install different operating systems from it as you have a menu there where you can select one of the ISOs you put on the drive before. There is a partition where you can simply copy the ISOs onto and delete them later. No need for burning them to the stick and wait for that process to finish.
@DarkfireTS
@DarkfireTS Жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks! Good content, good videography and recording, and fantastic pace of relevant, accurate info! Thanks Matt. I do need to ask - where can I get a worktop mat like yours, which shows motherboard sizing guides and USB pin layouts, please?
@Gamepalooza
@Gamepalooza 2 жыл бұрын
Love this content Matt.
@zeroturn7091
@zeroturn7091 2 жыл бұрын
Count me in for requesting the upgrades. I went with the same drives on Black Friday, could only afford three since I was still Christmas shopping. I went with the Molex to SATA solution since my NAS is at its core an archiving file server. It won’t be on for extended periods. I also believe that these drives have different firmware from the Reds, and chose to just using Basic as opposed to RAID. I have no idea how these would stand up to rebuilding a pool.
@tastymonkey
@tastymonkey 2 жыл бұрын
My "server" is the same HP Z420 workstation. It is a very good choice. I have 80GB of ECC RAM since it has an Xeon processor. I also have a SAS controller to handle my NAS drives.
@amstroh
@amstroh Жыл бұрын
I'd really like to see you add game servers like Minecraft, etc. that you mentioned. Great video!
@marty5300
@marty5300 Жыл бұрын
I was never a fan of shucking externals to rig up a server. I just buy used sas drives and LSI controllers from ebay.. works well. This last go around I bought new HGST/WD sas drives, but used an intel i7 11700 and B series motherboard.. added 10gb nics to all my servers and torrent box, main pc, etc. Couldn't be happier with it. Fast and stable. The 11700 I bought for transcoding without a gpu, and the IGP is more than enough.
@peronik349
@peronik349 2 жыл бұрын
Trunas uses the ZFS file system. this file system is by concept hungry for RAM! In my job I created a professional NAS with ZFS. with ZFS the rule is: Throughput problem -> Adds RAM Speed ​​issue -> Adds even more RAM! ! The classic rate is 1GB of RAM for 1TB of net data in the NAS! in your case the 64GB is a minimum, the OS needs RAM too; not to mention the caches on very high performance professional SSDs. ZFS uses read and write caches all the time (if they are not on dedicated disks, it uses the pool), installed on high performance ssd, ZFS will "abuse" the higher speed of SSDs to boost its performance
@miniblasan5717
@miniblasan5717 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the nostalgia trip back to Naruto, it's been a while since I last saw that series.
@RyanGrange
@RyanGrange 9 ай бұрын
First time you find out you're network adapter dies on you, you'll be really glad you have that video card for on-system troubleshooting.
@marramgg
@marramgg 6 ай бұрын
The PC cleaning part got me to sub immediately
@luckyowl10
@luckyowl10 Жыл бұрын
really like this budget server build, that case has a huge number of HDD space :o
@LetsDoBonsai
@LetsDoBonsai 2 ай бұрын
NIce glad i found this - im about to use my Fractel Design Case to create my NAS
@gamercatmeow3055
@gamercatmeow3055 2 жыл бұрын
This is going to inspire my next server!
@djk8541
@djk8541 Жыл бұрын
Stiff brush that comes with keyboard cleaning kit is perfect for quickly cleaning PC & AC air filters
@jigsound
@jigsound 2 жыл бұрын
Inspiring walkthrough! Gotta do something like that... 👍
@rexpepper2513
@rexpepper2513 Жыл бұрын
i love that case! its treated me so well
@Eddylive
@Eddylive Жыл бұрын
Great video! I'm thinking of doing something similar but probably less drives to start. Is it easy to add more drives after? Also my tech friend advised against doing something like this due to high power consumption of the computer compared to a smaller system. Any thoughts on that?
@roysigurdkarlsbakk3842
@roysigurdkarlsbakk3842 2 жыл бұрын
I have the same chassis, bought some years back. You can add up to two extra disk modules in there with room for three drives each, taking some space for PCIe, obviously, but that may be worth it. I'm using an LSI SAS controller for my drives, in addition to the onboard SATA ports. All drives are SATA, though, but SAS controllers support SATA as well as SAS. PS: You can move those rubbery gaskets around if you slide them aside and pop them out to fit all screws. At least, that has worked with all the drives I've tested so far.
@bansterref
@bansterref Жыл бұрын
What's the chassis model number?
@wanyelandy8847
@wanyelandy8847 Жыл бұрын
3.3v pin is power disable feature from WD and it is not to prevent shuck. It is hard to just mask the 3rd pin as it is very small. You can actually mask all the 3 pins from left not just the 3rd one, this is much better to do. Standard 3M electric tap should do the work.
@Zamsky39
@Zamsky39 2 жыл бұрын
I have the exact sane case for my home server! I love it
@poordelir
@poordelir Жыл бұрын
Very good points. Thanks
@Damuskinous
@Damuskinous 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing video hope to see more!!!!
@oscar8627
@oscar8627 2 жыл бұрын
Just so you know...the only reason I subscribed is because of your "PC Cleaning Jutsu" bit 🤣
@Thiccalus
@Thiccalus 10 ай бұрын
Awesome video! TY!
@Davidx_117
@Davidx_117 2 жыл бұрын
Great stuff, planning my own NAS soon and I'll consider that motherboard you chose (although I don't like the idea of using an adapter for the main board power, but it's probably fine). I would have gone with a better power supply personally, something running 24/7 storing a lot of data you want something real reliable. I'm not an expert in PSU's, but there's a PSU tier list on the cultists network that's quite well done and I'd stick to anything Tier A on there (Corsair RMX PSU's are a great option). Look forward to future updates on this server! (would love to see you show off a dual purpose, like running a game server alongside it as you mentioned) Oh and if you want a great SSD(s) at a great price keep an eye out for Best Buy Geek Squad refurbished Samsung 870 EVO's, the 500GB model sometimes goes on sale for $40 and 1TB model for $70. Despite the "refurbished" name they almost always have very little usage, highly recommended
@Ki6465
@Ki6465 2 жыл бұрын
Great video Matt! I definitely recommend Truenas. ZFS Pools are mainly what I was after. It’s been rock solid on my 12 bay Supermicro server. Currently have 8 WD 8TB reds in raid z3.
@TechByMattB
@TechByMattB 2 жыл бұрын
Nice! sounds like a great setup.
@SupremeRuleroftheWorld
@SupremeRuleroftheWorld 2 жыл бұрын
Truenas is only useful if you have unlimiyed funds to buy boxes of new drives every time. For normal people unraid is vastly superior
@3nertia
@3nertia 2 жыл бұрын
@@SupremeRuleroftheWorld Could you elaborate on that, please? Why would TrueNas require "unlimited funds to buy boxes of new drives every time"? Every time what?
@SupremeRuleroftheWorld
@SupremeRuleroftheWorld 2 жыл бұрын
@@3nertia i dare you to put in 1 new drive to expande storage
@3nertia
@3nertia 2 жыл бұрын
@@SupremeRuleroftheWorld WHY!?
@AhmadZakiVision
@AhmadZakiVision Жыл бұрын
First time came to this channel ✌🏻 • watch from Melaka, Malaysia 🇲🇾
@RainMan52
@RainMan52 2 жыл бұрын
That was a solid jutsu
@BearyCoolDude
@BearyCoolDude 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome cleaning ninjutsu. Kakashi would be proud. I would definitely be interested in seeing more from the home NAS story. I'm setting one up myself just for peace of mind for memories, games, etc. Great stuff, brudda.
@CloudGod88
@CloudGod88 7 ай бұрын
Awesome upload 💯
@lepompier132
@lepompier132 2 жыл бұрын
Matt, you forgot about other content creators that get help from sponsors and get a fully build server with ALL the drives that will populate the server. And they also get a lot of MB since tey are sponsered and in some cases they don't even monetize these pices of hardware. So in all they get a ton of freebee they have it easy to build what ever they want. Unlike you or I, we need to buy these parts on a small budget. And It's not easy, I know that!
@creed5248
@creed5248 Жыл бұрын
Looks awesome !!!
@jettro8523
@jettro8523 2 жыл бұрын
love the build, big fan of the old hp z420 for rebuilds!
@joegee2815
@joegee2815 2 жыл бұрын
I built a NAS a few years ago and used Proxmox because I couldn't get TruNAS to work hosting VMs properly. I used desktop hardware and it's been working well for quite a while (5-6 years? I think). But now I want to build a new one with more space and maybe server hardware. This has some good tips. Craft Computing is a good source of information on this type of build.
@AXchamp
@AXchamp 2 жыл бұрын
So this came out in perfect timing. Great tip on striping the external drives. Never seen that before. But I'll only subscribe if you do the upgrade video. 😝
@lxst-in-trvnslvtixn
@lxst-in-trvnslvtixn 2 жыл бұрын
i have the same case with fewer drives but it already resonates like crazy
@MrGoatFish10
@MrGoatFish10 Жыл бұрын
84TB Nice!... planning to do this in the future for hoarding stuff...
@gurumediation9925
@gurumediation9925 Жыл бұрын
That is a great and silent case. I happen to have one too and wanted to mention, that there is dust filter on bottom too. Didn't see you pulling it out during the clean up, so you might want to check how that looks. If it is as dusty as your front panel filter was, I bet your power source won't get much airflow ;) You can pull the filter out from front side. Just grab the "bottom" of the case (below the door) with your fingers and slide the filter module toward yourself.
@zobertson
@zobertson Жыл бұрын
I have the same case and love it!
@garycarr8467
@garycarr8467 Жыл бұрын
@@zobertson which case is this? where can I find it?
@Sustainavore
@Sustainavore Жыл бұрын
@@garycarr8467 I don't think they make it anymore. He referenced what it was in the video at one point
@javajav3004
@javajav3004 Ай бұрын
@@garycarr8467 fractal design define r4
@abinadius
@abinadius 2 жыл бұрын
6:18 this made me subscribe to the channel... and also the great information in this video 😂
@jrbling25
@jrbling25 9 ай бұрын
Nice build - curious if you've ran into any performance issue given the large gap between the ZFS recommended GB of ram per TB of storage ?
@freddyhardware840
@freddyhardware840 4 ай бұрын
I was given A Dell PE R210 II just a month ago then a month later I suddenly have an R620 and T410 in an 18RU server rack. I have a PC Case I was thinking of building a gaming PC but I don't think it's going to happen anymore. 😃This video has given me ideas and will be hunting for parts soon.
@bpmm0171
@bpmm0171 Жыл бұрын
Great tip on the HDDs
@Perplexer1
@Perplexer1 3 ай бұрын
In case anyone is wondering: You can't sell the WD Elements enclosures as empty hard drive enclosures because they only accommodate the original drive that was in. This is because the rubber grommets are unique to the original HDD and won't exactly fit any other, preventing you from successfully inserting/fitting a 3rd party drive in the enclosure. The controller board itself will however work with other drives, at least it did in my case (8TB WD Elements). But it's not really too useful if you can't fit non-original drives into the enclosure.
@normang.827
@normang.827 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks again!
@fallenkeith5885
@fallenkeith5885 11 ай бұрын
I seriously need to get one of those. The sata ports on several of my PCs are completely maxed and I got around 50 TB of redundancy
@Thewickedjon
@Thewickedjon 2 жыл бұрын
great stuff!
@nikonJD99
@nikonJD99 Ай бұрын
The use of old workstation boards is interesting as there are so many to be had on ebay - it looks as though the Dell workstations are more proprietary, but good to see that the HP boards might follow some standards - i'll take a look at some of those.
@kris-ec2bc
@kris-ec2bc 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot. I m building one as my requirements are very similar.
@robestey5628
@robestey5628 Жыл бұрын
Cool. Good job
@tastymonkey
@tastymonkey 2 жыл бұрын
TrueNAS uses ZFS as the file system for the data drives. It is great overall for combating bitrot. TrueNAS also likes using ECC RAM to help combat bitrot as well. Look it up. It is some interesting reading.
@Im1CrazyCow
@Im1CrazyCow Жыл бұрын
Jeff from Craft Computing would be Proud Matt !!
@jordanmillane9581
@jordanmillane9581 2 жыл бұрын
Your Back .. Welcome to True NAS / unraid :)
@JakeTechReviews
@JakeTechReviews 2 жыл бұрын
Pretty cool, I was thinking about turning my old gaming system into a nas, its been sitting in my closet.
@bbrice100
@bbrice100 Жыл бұрын
I also have a HP z420 and you need to tell the viewers about how to swap it properly. The system won't boot up without a video card at all. Also you need to short out some pins in the USB 2.0 header, USB 3.0 header and the FireWire header. CPU fan header 5th pin needs to be jumped to the 1st pin. Also fans have to be connected to the memory and rear exhaust headers. It will only boot with all these conditions satisfied. USB 3.0 header was especially hard and i had to solder the 2 pins under the motherboard.
@st0mper121
@st0mper121 2 жыл бұрын
That is really nice. I kinda use your old way. I have external drives. I use raspberry Pi's to make the Nas. But i also use memory cards to attach to the Nas along with HDD converted to USB attached to the Nas. Thought about building a media center pc again but the Pi's are keeping up just fine.
@unperrier5998
@unperrier5998 Жыл бұрын
to find out whether you can boot UEFI, just look at whether efivars and/or /boot/efi is mounted in your current linux system.
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