I'm definitely not a computer guru like some of you are.
But I've had a lot of fun building PCs the last 6 months.
Then one day I heard someone mention the word "NAS". I also heard the world “gigabit routers”.
I thought, “What the heck are NAS and gigabit routers?”
I found that NAS stood for Network Attached Storage. A gigabit router has a transfer rate limit of 1,000 mbps or 1gbps, as opposed to a regular Ethernet router which is limited to 100 mbps rate.
So I typed in “gigabit router” on Amazon.com and found a D-Link gigabit router that had great reviews. And it only cost around $75. Cool.
Then I typed in “NAS” on Amazon.com and it came up with an 8-bay (8 HDD) NAS that cost like $1,500! Not cool.
So my non-engineer, non-IT brain started clicking. How can build a cheaper NAS with even more HDD capability? How can I be different?
I did some searching on Amazon and found the ANTEC-1200 PC case for around $150. It comes with 9 HDD bays, but you can order another HDD cage ($25). This brings the total HDD capability to 12! So that’s a total of 4 HDD cages w/ 4 fans = 12 HDD bays.
The ANTEC-1200 also comes with three front 120mm fans, one 200mm top fan, and two 120mm rear fans. I bought 2 additional fans (one for Side of Case + one for Bottom of Case). There is a slot for the optional side case. But I also tied a 120mm fan to the bottom of the case blowing upward.
I would also need a motherboard ($50), 2GB RAM ($50), CPU Cooler w/ Dual 120mm fans ($50), & a PSU w/ 120mm fan ($75).
Oh, and 12 hard drives require 12 SATA ports! Yikes. I better get 2 SYBA SATA cards ($30). Each card has 4 SATA, and the MOBO has 4 SATA, which brings the total to exactly 12 SATA ports.
And since graphics cards are so cheap these days, I might as well get a $50 RADEON 5450. However, I could do without a graphics card to keep the temperature even lower since this would be used as a NAS.
So the total comes out to be $480. It’s basically another PC, but it does the job.
After the build and everything was connected to the gigabit router, it was time to do some casual testing. I copied a 45GB BD ISO file from one HDD on my primary SilverStone Crown PC to another HDD on the Antec NAS. It started out at 135 mbps and went down to about a 110 mbps!
Wow! I was impressed. I didn’t see how that was possible because the fastest rate I’ve seen from one internal HDD to another internal HDD was around 80 mbps on the same SilverStone PC!
Next was the temperature test. I left the Antec-1200 on for 48 hrs straight. All 12 HDDs were around 30 C degrees. Cool.
Including the PSU fan, this Antec has 12 fans. So how loud or quiet is it? From across the room, I cannot hear it running. My Optoma projector is the only noise I hear when I’m not watching a movie.
After I moved all my BD ISO files to the 12 HDD on the Antec, I created a shortcut for each ISO file and placed them in a VIDEO folder on the desktop, which was fast and easy. There are around 400+ shortcuts.
Now all my 400+ BDs are in alphabetical order and on ONE folder!!! All I have to do is double-click on any of the shortcuts and the BD would start on my Power DVD10 Ultra.
I'll have to take some pics and post them on my photobucket site later this week.