I agree. A friend who is retiring his Homelab, is giving me some 10TB SAS Drives. I asked for health report and yes, the programs just do not display any power on time and amount of write. Although, it was connected individually in a Dell Server. So, how can i obtain this info?SAS drives generally cost more than their SATA counterparts, have poor SATA reporting and require a SAS HBA.
Well, there is definitely struggle. I never understood if the drive cannot reach up to 600MB/s why there is 6Gb/s and what benefit a SAS 12Gb/s can offer when both will run at same speeds. Of course, new drives can take advantage like 2X18 from Seagate that drive is quite good for 6Gb/s.SAS backplanes and expanders are certainly useful, but I struggle to see any benefit of SAS for the hard drives themselves.
If someone's giving them to you, there's no real reason not to use SAS--there just isn't any real reason to favor it over SATA, and if buying new, they're considerably more expensive. At one point, there were higher speed (10k RPM, and even 15k) SAS drives available (e.g., https://www.ebay.com/itm/394864744845), particularly in smaller capacities, but these have been overtaken by SSDs.Secondly, should i really not consider using a SAS Drive? I mean i don't have a server or chassis with backplanes but a tower server with HBA Card. Would it be safe to buy them? I have never used a SAS drive before.
Oh, if you have the SAS drives, or can have them for a better price than SATA drives, go for SAS.Secondly, should i really not consider using a SAS Drive?
No caveats.Does it work fine or has some caveats?
6 Gb/s (SATA III, SAS 2), or 12 Gb/s (SAS 3) is the bandwidth available to the interface.Well, there is definitely struggle. I never understood if the drive cannot reach up to 600MB/s why there is 6Gb/s and what benefit a SAS 12Gb/s can offer when both will run at same speeds. Of course, new drives can take advantage like 2X18 from Seagate that drive is quite good for 6Gb/s.
I got your point!If someone's giving them to you, there's no real reason not to use SAS--there just isn't any real reason to favor it over SATA, and if buying new, they're considerably more expensive. At one point, there were higher speed (10k RPM, and even 15k) SAS drives available (e.g., https://www.ebay.com/itm/394864744845), particularly in smaller capacities, but these have been overtaken by SSDs.
Yes, my friend is giving it to me. He has like bunch of them and we both are upgrading our NAS this year.Oh, if you have the SAS drives, or can have them for a better price than SATA drives, go for SAS.
Now i get your point totally. Thanks for clearing it up!6 Gb/s (SATA III, SAS 2), or 12 Gb/s (SAS 3) is the bandwidth available to the interface.
A SSD may be able to make full use of it, but no spinning drive may come close to that (except maybe for a small burst to or from the cache).
SATA is a direct link: controller-cable-drive. SATA III is totally wasted on HDDs, which are just as fine on 3 Gb/s SATA II.
SAS allows for more complex, and branched topologies: The controller may be linked to an expander which then is linked to several drives… or even to a second expander. In this configuration, more bandwidth may be useful because traffic for many drives is going through a single cable.
Yay. Any trusted source/brand you would recommend to get these cables please? I have never used a SAS Drive before so no idea about it.If your HBA has SFF-8643 connectors these are the right cables.
Eight in two rows of four in the PSU compartment, two on the floor of the motherboard compartment (plus two 2.5'' slots behind the front panel).Having that case and no idea how you can fit 11 drives.
Ouch. How could i miss that!Eight in two rows of four in the PSU compartment, two on the floor of the motherboard compartment (plus two 2.5'' slots behind the front panel).
Plus another optional 3.5'' slot on the base of the PSU compartment iirc.
Amazon.Can you recommend me some brand/source to get SFF8643 to SAS Cables?
Possible to suggest one with the link with your expertise?Amazon.
I use their SATA cables, no issues so far.Possible to suggest one with the link with your expertise?
Thank you so much for the help!I use their SATA cables, no issues so far.
Cables are cables, so no magic here. Chinese sellers on eBay/AliExpress, your local IT retailer, Amazon/NewEgg, anything goes.Yay. Any trusted source/brand you would recommend to get these cables please? I have never used a SAS Drive before so no idea about it.
As @Davvo guessed, 8 in the drive cages, 2 on the floor of the motherboard chamber (so far, as designed), and the 11th drive, to bump it to Z3, lies upside down on the floor of the drive/PSU chamber, tightly squeezed between the PSU and a 15 mm thick fan, and "secured" by a patch of Blu-Tack. Unprofessional, and unsuitable for shipping. Good enough for occasionally moving the NAS within the room.Also, i checked your signature and found that you're using Node 804. Can you share the drive setup pictures? Having that case and no idea how you can fit 11 drives.
Cool. Got it!Cables are cables, so no magic here. Chinese sellers on eBay/AliExpress, your local IT retailer, Amazon/NewEgg, anything goes.
For SATA, you'd want the shorter variety to be on the safe side. For SAS, length is just a matter of cable management within the case.
Nice, nice.As @Davvo guessed, 8 in the drive cages, 2 on the floor of the motherboard chamber (so far, as designed), and the 11th drive, to bump it to Z3, lies upside down on the floor of the drive/PSU chamber, tightly squeezed between the PSU and a 15 mm thick fan, and "secured" by a patch of Blu-Tack. Unprofessional, and unsuitable for shipping. Good enough for occasionally moving the NAS within the room.
Thanks. Just wanted to make sure.It does not really make a difference ... you are way overthinking this, IMHO. Most modern high capacity drives are 4k native, anyway.