Lost Password? No account yet? Sign up! Why bother?
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size

SmallNetBuilder - Small Network Help

  
Home arrow NAS arrow NAS Reviews arrow QNAP TS-409 Review: The Quad drive NAS for You?
QNAP TS-409 Review: The Quad drive NAS for You? Print E-mail
Craig Ellison   
February 27, 2008

Introduction

QNAP TS-409

At a Glance
Product QNAP Turbo NAS (TS-409 Pro), (TS-409)
Summary Four-drive BYOD NAS with support for RAID 0, 1, 5, 5+ hot spare and 6.
Pros • Hot-swappable drives
• Online volume expansion and RAID migration
• Automatic rebuild to hot spare
• Built-in LAMP server, DLNA multimedia server, FTP, iTunes
• USB support for external storage, UPS or up to 3 printers
Cons • Media Center didn't function well with large music library
• Thumbnails didn't automatically generate
• No US-based phone support

If you’re considering a NAS to expand your network storage, you have three different types to choose from. First, there’s the simple, single-drive device that merely adds storage capacity but provides no fault tolerance. All of your data is stored on a single drive, and if that drive crashes, you’ll lose your data (unless you’ve done proper backups). 

Next, there are two-drive models. Virtually all of the NAS manufacturers offer two-drive models. You have the option of RAID 0, RAID 1, or JBOD. If you configure for RAID 1, all of your data from one drive is mirrored onto the second drive. 

However, it’s the four-drive NASs that offer the most options for fault tolerance. When you start looking at four-drive devices, you’ll notice that in these devices, different manufacturers include different features for RAID configuration. Some allow for RAID 0, 1 and 5. Other devices include RAID 10, RAID 6, or RAID 5 with a hot spare. More importantly, some support hot swappable drives. In this review, I’ll be looking at the QNAP TS-409 Pro.

Last fall, we reviewed the QNAP TS209. In that review, Jim Buzbee found that the TS209, a dual-drive version of the TS101, was a full-featured, hot-swappable NAS with full LAMP server capabilities. The feature set of the TS-409 mirrors that of the TS209 with additional RAID capabilities available in the four-drive model. Thus, I won’t spend much time describing features already covered in previous reviews.

Note NOTE: Like the TS-209, the 409 comes in two versions: the TS-409 and TS-409 Pro. Following the approach taken with the TS-209, both 409 versions use the same hardware and differ only in support for Active Directory and NFS in the 409 Pro.

Product Tour

Front Panel

Figure 1: QNAP TS-409 Front Panel

The front panel of the TS-409 is quite similar to the TS209. There are seven LEDs as identified above, along with one of the unit’s three USB 2.0 ports. The One Touch Copy Button allows you to copy the contents from an external USB storage device to a pre-defined volume on the server, or depending on your configuration, copy from the NAS to the USB storage device. 

The screened front panel is secured with only a flimsy plastic tab-and-slot style latch. For security, I would have preferred a front panel that locks to physically secure the drives, or at least a latch that will withstand more wear and tear.

Rear Panel

Figure 2: TS-409 Rear Panel


Tags: BYOD, NAS, Qnap, RAID,

Related Articles:

Slideshow - LaCie Ethernet Disk RAID drive fail and recovery
QNAP adds 5-bay SMB NAS
Slideshow: Qnap TS-209 Pro
Slideshow: Trendnet TS-S402 2-Bay SATA I/II Network Storage Enclosure
Slideshow: Qnap TS-409 Pro Turbo
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

Difficult Routing Scenario - Point to Point to VPN Tunnel
Here's my situation. Please help. 3 Offices Office A Office B Office C Office A and B are connected via Point To Point, using Cisco routers. Office B and C...

Need help with nework planning - Wireless
Not sure if this is ever going to actually happen, but I am supposed to talk to my Apt manager about creating a network across...

Onboard and Intel Matrix Storage Manager RAID
Tried to get back to the Fast NAS series today by trying BIOS level RAID with an Intel ICH9 controller. Got pulled up short very...

SSD Question
Hello Tim and Group, I'm not sure where to put this on this forum, so I'm placing it here, because at least it's "storage" albeit not...

5-port Gig Switch tested with NetIQ Chariot Throughtput Benchmarks
Tim, What do you think of these results for unmanaged 5-port Gig Switch? NetIQ Chariot Throughtput Benchmarks 4 PC's Full Duplex - 512 MB packets - Total 2602...

Slideshows

Western Digital ShareSpace QNAP TS-509 Pro D-Link DNS-343 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure Thecus N3200 RAID 5 NAS D-Link DIR-628 RangeBooster N Dual Band Router Adtran NetVanta 3120 More
 

Ldr:0.0017249584198, Rct:0.00586605072021, Sky:0.00741195678711, Tlink:0.0852060317993, TopPG:0.0852890014648, GQV:0.0854358673096 seconds to load.