This might be a strange one.
I build a new PC. Yea and verily, it is like unto a tiny god. Especially compared to my old PC, which as I have opined around here before I built in 2012 (!) and was still sporting a Sandy Bridge i7 2600K.
Is. Is sporting. It still works. I will undoubtedly replace my living room media center machine with it.
My new machine is very fast and very swanky, and through my component selection I also inadvertently wound up making it very quiet, as well, which it turns out I kind of like. Part of this is no doubt contributed to by the fact that it hasn’t got any hard drives in it – just two SSD’s. Currently its four SATA sockets sit forlorn and empty.
Part of my old machine’s raison d’être was that it had a big old RAID array in it. Four whole terabytes across a RAID 5 array consisting of 4 disks. Hey, cut me a break. That was a lot of ones and zeroes, over a decade ago. Of course, the contents of that entire RAID can fit snugly (very snugly…) on my 4TB boot drive now. But I kind of want some additional bulk storage. I have work to do; All that media out there ain’t gonna pirate itself.
This raises an interesting concern, since this thing lives on (not under, at least as of yet) my desk full time about 24" away from where I sit. And this is a metric that’s remarkably difficult to search or filter for:
What is a good quiet hard drive option?
Not fast, not inexpensive, not even especially capacious – I’ll be stringing 4 disks together as a RAID 5 array again. 10 or 12 TB units will probably do. So I don’t care about any of those things.
These days it seems that big spitting platter drives are all marketed towards either NAS applications with all the jet-turbine trappings that entails, or “screaming” gaming performance, which is deeply silly since all of my OS, programs, and games will reside on an SSD.
Any ideas?
(And no, I am not interested in building a NAS and tucking it in a closet someplace.)
You can totally turn an old computer into a NAS. I prsonally don’t see any point in NAS appliances for this reason.
You should consider downgrading it though as power efficiency is paramount in a NAS while performance barely matters.
Yes, I see no reason to leave the fire-breathing, several-generations-old gaming GPU in it in that case.