I was thinking about getting a home NAS, but am not sure if I want to build one. It seems like they have come down enough in price that you can get one cheaper. What are peoples thoughts on buy vs build?
Also if I get one, I would be looking at 4 bay+ and RAID options beside 0.
I am still in the early stages of research on these so useful information from people who know more about them would be helpful.
“It's unwise to pay too much, but it's worse to pay too little. When you pay too much, you lose a little money - that's all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do. The common law of business balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot - it can't be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well to add something for the risk you run, and if you do that you will have enough to pay for something better.”
--John Ruskin
Comments
Whereas if you have a lot of old hardware lying around then you can get more freedom to re-use it if you build your own.
I have several of each brand - both have been fantastic.
--John Ruskin
OP mentioned 4 bay so guessing a fair amount of storage is being considered but if not there is always what you get with e.g. Amazon Fire tablets etc.
--John Ruskin
An extra device might also add interference with the other devices on your network, leaving less aggregate bandwidth even before the NAS takes its share. I'm not sufficiently familiar with the fine details of how WiFi works to know whether that will or will not be the case.
I've never really looked into a NAS, as I don't have any use for one myself. But making one wireless strikes me as a strange thing to do, as that adds cost for a feature that most people shouldn't use, even if you mostly use WiFi for your network.
I agree with Quizzical, definitely get a straight up NAS and talk to it through your router, if anything goes wrong you can have it send you a text alert. Wi-Fi out of the box is going to cause you more grief than setting up alerts.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
i wouldn’t necessarily require WiFi built into the NAS given how easy it is to add a bridge, and upgrade that bridge as WiFi standards evolve
^ They are not the best but it depends what you are doing with it, as far as "NAS" just buy the enclosure and use your own drives.
--John Ruskin
My computer, my wife’s computer, my laptop, a small email server, and the NAS are all hardwired into a 1Gb switch.
Also on that switch is a 802.11 AC WiFi bridge that connects back to my router for internet for all of those devices.
Access to my NAS is really fast to my computers, where I need it. And I can get to my NAS remotely if I have to.
I run Plex on my Synology as well. It streams over AC to my TVs at 1080 with no issues. Transcoding can get a bit dicey because of the limited CPU power in the NAS but I very rarely have a need to do that while streaming
Now, I have really slow internet - even B/G is much faster than my ISP, so having all my devices connect to the internet over one WiFi bridge isn’t a bottleneck for me, but if someone had fiber that may be a different situation.