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expirediconian | Staff posted Mar 29, 2024 06:44 PM
expirediconian | Staff posted Mar 29, 2024 06:44 PM

SABRENT 10 Bay 3.5” SATA Hard Drive Tray Less Docking Station

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$398

$600

33% off
Amazon
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Update: This popular deal is available again with a new promo code.

Amazon has SABRENT 10 Bay 3.5" SATA Hard Drive Tray Less Docking Station (DS-UCTB) on sale for $398.38 when you apply promo code 200XUCTB during checkout. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Editor iconian for sharing this deal.

About this Item:
  • USB 3.2 Gen2 Type-C port supports transfer speeds of up to 10 Gbps
  • 10x SATA 6 Gbit/s 3.5" hard drive tray-less bays
  • Hot-Swappable with 10 independent ON/OFF power switches
  • Two 120mm fans for additional cooling capability
  • Note: This multi-bay station does NOT have built in RAID functionality. However, software RAID configurations are possible

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Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff

Original Post

Written by iconian | Staff
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Update: This popular deal is available again with a new promo code.

Amazon has SABRENT 10 Bay 3.5" SATA Hard Drive Tray Less Docking Station (DS-UCTB) on sale for $398.38 when you apply promo code 200XUCTB during checkout. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Editor iconian for sharing this deal.

About this Item:
  • USB 3.2 Gen2 Type-C port supports transfer speeds of up to 10 Gbps
  • 10x SATA 6 Gbit/s 3.5" hard drive tray-less bays
  • Hot-Swappable with 10 independent ON/OFF power switches
  • Two 120mm fans for additional cooling capability
  • Note: This multi-bay station does NOT have built in RAID functionality. However, software RAID configurations are possible

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff

Original Post

Written by iconian | Staff

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Model: SABRENT 10 Bay 3.5” SATA Hard Drive Tray Less Docking Station (USB 3.2 Type C and Type A) (DS-UCTB)

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RelaxedRose979
232 Posts
34 Reputation
The issue is 10 drives sharing the 10Gbps USB 3.1 gen 2 interface. Hardware RAID is no longer recommended as software can keep up and gives the flexibility in not being paired with a specific controller or losing all of your data.

The Mini PCs we normally see listed max out with 2.5Gbps networking. So this would be able to keep up and saturate the pipe. If you needed more bandwidth, having separate direct SATA connections would be needed, likely with some type of external SAS connection.

10 drives is very large, unless you are going for extremely cheap small drives to fill the array. IMO it's better to use larger drives as each drive consumes power to run. UGreen has a Kickstarter going right now that has some really crazy deals for NASes that are supposed to ship in June. You might be more bang for your buck there.

Also, anyone thinking of using this many drives, Go with at least one parity disk, or even better two. The chance of data loss increases as you move to more and more drives. Not caring about movies on a single 10TB drive... fine. Not caring about 180TB, that's going to be a much larger pain to replace everything.
wherestheanykey
4997 Posts
874 Reputation
Be sure to throw it on a UPS.

I was checking what level of support it has from Sabrent (zero, they have really gone downhill with firmware updates) and there's a thread about how it doesn't have automatic power recovery to bring the drives back up after power loss.
iconian
76456 Posts
211095 Reputation
they are sausages, not hot dogs, get it right!


actually, i am not even sure of the reference? but sabrent is very well known in ssd and pc component business for the last 5-10 years

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Mar 31, 2024 01:12 PM
1,538 Posts
Joined Sep 2021
ThriftyIdea6692Mar 31, 2024 01:12 PM
1,538 Posts
Quote from iconian :
oh, makes sense, but I never heard of that brand of food, so maybe it's regional only>?
From Wiki: Marathon Enterprises, Inc., is a major regional supplier of meats and gourmet delicatessen products to the food service industry in the New York City metropolitan area. Headquartered in Englewood, New Jersey, it is a private corporation, and sells its products under the Sabrett brand name.The company's flagship product is the Sabrett brand frankfurter. They and other meats, such as pastrami and salami, are processed at the Marathon factory in the Bronx, New York. The frankfurters are sold through Sabrett branded carts on the streets of New York City and elsewhere in the metropolitan area, local supermarkets, and club locations such as BJ's, Costco, and Jetro.

So, you're both wrong, neither sausages nor hot dogs, they're Frankfurters! Wink
1
Mar 31, 2024 01:26 PM
151 Posts
Joined Feb 2014
ryanistheryanMar 31, 2024 01:26 PM
151 Posts
Quote from Dopavash :
Meh, I personally would rather spend a bit more and get way more functionality with an old dell server machine.
I have that old server machine and the dual xeons kill me in electricity, it idles around 200w.
Mar 31, 2024 02:47 PM
4,097 Posts
Joined Jul 2005
PornoMar 31, 2024 02:47 PM
4,097 Posts
Quote from InstanceNoodle :
If you are new to das and nas, I do not recommend buying the ugreen nas. It is the best money to hardware currently (8 bays 12th gen intel), but the software is still ?alpha? ?beta?... nothing is working yet. You are buying on a promise.

I dont know enough... I have to research if they are able to see your data. Will the virus hitting the other nas will affect it? Can China look into your stuff? Nothing is finalized as far as I know.

I know that they heavily edit their software at this time. You can not install any other os even if you go into the bios. So if the company dies, your software can not be updated, and the hardware is a paperweight unless you ok will not point it to the net (air gap) or ok with it being hack later on.

Best ready to go is synology 8 bays 1821. It is the newest most bays without the need to be hounded by synology to buy their drives. terramaster and asustor and other ready to go nas has some problem in the past. You can search if they have resolved it or not.
Supposedly you can load any OS on it ... Or will be able to?

The 8bay pro also has an i7 unlike the rest of their offerings. Support team confirmed in comments.
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This user is an Expert in Home & Home Improvement
Mar 31, 2024 02:56 PM
4,997 Posts
Joined Oct 2013
wherestheanykey
Expert
This user is an Expert in Home & Home Improvement
Mar 31, 2024 02:56 PM
4,997 Posts
Quote from ConcreteMan :
Got dizzy reading all the comments. I think this is for data hoarders like me. I save everything, for what I don't know. I met another one at a computer swap meet I go to and he said he was a data hoarder and that is where I learned of my disease. I have a lot of external drives that I look over once in awhile and see stuff I forgot that I had saved. I have plenty of hard drives I picked up over the years so this would be perfect to put them in. I have a few 8 gig Western Digital I bought that I haven't shucked which are pretty full. When the big drives came out ( I started computing around 1990) I always said that was a lot of info to lose. I have one raid unit with 4 8 gig drives with stuff I don't want to lose. The rest is expendable, lose it and who cares. Most not important. Anyway this unit would be perfect. Since it has a switch for each drive you wouldn't have to have all the drives running at once. I have Sabrent hubs and external enclosures which have never failed me. That is my opinion. Now I will keep my eye on this and wait for the price to drop more. When and if it does I will get one. That is if they don't come up with a 15 or 20 unit one.
You should probably work on separating sentences into paragraphs if these comments threw you off.

Your wall of text is very hard to read.
1
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Mar 31, 2024 03:02 PM
4,997 Posts
Joined Oct 2013
wherestheanykey
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Mar 31, 2024 03:02 PM
4,997 Posts
Quote from cpgeek :
Storage spaces is notoriously terrible when it comes to data recovery, overall speed, and overall reliability. I wouldn't trust at all. But you're 100% right, hardware raid isn't recommended either. which means for redundant arrays, you want something that runs linux or bsd at it's core. there are quite a few easy-to-use storage-centric solutions such as truenas scale, unraid, openmediavault, etc. Truenas is pretty great, I use it in production in multiple locations, it's super easy to install and manage, it's free, and supports as many disks as your computer does (and works great with SAS HBAs and SAS JBODs as well for expansion), uses zfs for redundancy which is fantastic, and has a very friendly webui.

Hardware-wise though USB is ABYSMAL for reliable storage as the cheap usb controllers used in stuff like this likes to disconnect randomly and try to reconnect which is hell on redundant storage systems.

hardware raid is pretty much dead now, particularly with the move toward software defined storage. there really isn't appreciable overhead on modern machines for software raid, either classic raid setups like mdraid56 or more modern (significantly better) implementations like zfs. Do things slow down during the occasional scrub (that you can usually run off-hours and have the option of limiting the performance on?)) sure. but that scrub is your bit rot protection that many hardware raid controllers don't bother to implement. then there's the raid write hole to consider that most hardware raid cards simply don't. then there's the matter of because zfs is both raid system as well as file system and it's copy-on-write, recovery from power failures or bad-checksummed-on-write blocks is to simply back up to the previous state and it's ready for retry instead of dumping bad data to the disk leaving it in an inconsistent state... I could write books on experiences on why hardware raid is terrible... modern proper raid with zfs or i suppose btrfs (though I admit my lack of experience with btrfs honestly) is the way to go with single machine storage systems. - if you want a rack of storage though, and you've got proper high speed networking and ssd caching, ceph is sometimes more appropriate (but most people don't run ceph at home either unless it's for something like a small proxmox cluster.

tl;dr: with enough ram for the ARC, and a reasonably modern cpu (like 8th gen intel onward or zen+ onward) there should realistically be very little overhead on a proper zfs setup and doing so with SAS is going to be SIGNIFICANTLY more reliable than usb.
I briefly parsed your replies, but your approach is bordering on thread jacking.

You're incorrect about hardware RAID being dead.

Synology alone would never let that happen.
2
Mar 31, 2024 04:00 PM
93 Posts
Joined May 2019
RyGeyeMar 31, 2024 04:00 PM
93 Posts
I've been using one of these since last October and it's been rock solid so far. I use StableBit DrivePool [stablebit.com] to combine all disks into a single drive letter, paired with SnapRAID [snapraid.it] for onsite parity redundancy, and Backblaze Personal [backblaze.com] for unlimited cloud backup.

Dedicating one parity disk for every four data disks and maxing out each bay with a 20TB drive (could even go higher) provides a max of 160TB of data in a single enclosure.

There's a lot of NAS vs. DAS debate in this thread, but it all boils down to your specific needs and use case. For me, I decided to prioritize storage and utilize my existing gaming desktop to handle Plex transcoding vs. pay the premium for a separate NAS with worse specs. If you need something powered on 24/7, then a NAS probably makes more sense.
Mar 31, 2024 04:04 PM
2,935 Posts
Joined May 2018
TimlessMar 31, 2024 04:04 PM
2,935 Posts
Quote from RyanR1939 :
I've been using one of these since last October and it's been rock solid so far. I use StableBit DrivePool [stablebit.com] to combine all disks into a single drive letter, paired with SnapRAID [snapraid.it] for onsite parity redundancy, and Backblaze Personal [backblaze.com] for unlimited cloud backup.

Dedicating one parity disk for every four data disks and maxing out each bay with a 20TB drive (could even go higher) provides a max of 160TB of data in a single enclosure.

There's a lot of NAS vs. DAS debate in this thread, but it all boils down to your specific needs and use case. For me, I decided to prioritize storage and utilize my existing gaming desktop to handle Plex transcoding vs. pay the premium for a separate NAS with worse specs. If you need something powered on 24/7, then a NAS probably makes more sense.
So you shut down your Plex? And have to start it when needed?

And nas don't need top end specs. 5 year old pc will work fine.
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Mar 31, 2024 04:08 PM
3 Posts
Joined Nov 2019
LavenderTexture780Mar 31, 2024 04:08 PM
3 Posts
Purchased one of these about a year ago only to return it. I liked it had 10 bays compared to 8 bays which most other encloures of this size have. My issue with it was the way the drives load into the slots. The spring on door is so stiff and hard to close with a drive i was scared of damaging the drives just by inserting and removing them. I currently have a 8 bay Mediasonic enclosure that has caddy style.
Mar 31, 2024 04:13 PM
155 Posts
Joined Jul 2012
Xdeals122Mar 31, 2024 04:13 PM
155 Posts
Anyone saying it's too risky with 10 drives is just paranoid or have never heard of RAID. This is a good cheap DAS solution if you use software RAID such as Storage Spaces or Snapraid.

The problem is mostly with DAS as the interface is a single USB 3.1 port so good luck waiting for days to sync data or do backups.
Mar 31, 2024 04:22 PM
93 Posts
Joined May 2019
RyGeyeMar 31, 2024 04:22 PM
93 Posts
Quote from Timless :
So you shut down your Plex? And have to start it when needed?

And nas don't need top end specs. 5 year old pc will work fine.
Right, I run a Plex server on my gaming desktop and map all media libraries to the Sabrent enclosure. Most of the time my computer's already powered on during the day, so I don't find it to be an inconvenience over a NAS for my particular use case.

For me, long term storage expansion with an economic, unlimited cloud backup solution was the priority. With a DAS setup like this, Backblaze Personal gives you unlimited cloud backup for $9/mo (used to be even cheaper). Once you get into cloud backup for a NAS, I couldn't find a truly unlimited option where you weren't paying per TB.

I'm not suggesting this is the right or wrong way to do things, just sharing my own experience in hopes that it helps others.
Mar 31, 2024 04:42 PM
120 Posts
Joined Aug 2013
JordanJ5883Mar 31, 2024 04:42 PM
120 Posts
Quote from wherestheanykey :
What does Unraid have to do with this?

This is a DAS. Do your homework.
says the guy who needs to do his homework
2
Mar 31, 2024 04:47 PM
120 Posts
Joined Aug 2013
JordanJ5883Mar 31, 2024 04:47 PM
120 Posts
Quote from NtndoGuy3 :
Can confirm, I have this on my Plex server as JBOD and it's excellent. Zero issues at all.
Exactly, Idiots on here pretending they need data center performace and redundancy and are going to get it for 500 dollars.
2
1
Mar 31, 2024 05:05 PM
329 Posts
Joined Jul 2018
cpc13Mar 31, 2024 05:05 PM
329 Posts
Quote from InstanceNoodle :
Software raid is the only way now. Hardware raid is dead or going to be soon. Everyone says to flash the raid card into IT mode for software like unraid and trunas.
Not even close. Don't get me wrong, software RAID wonderful thing fits great in a lot of use cases. However, look into any data center anywhere, or any server that is not bottom shelf, shoestring budget and you're going to find hardware RAID and you're going to see the system/OS discs on RAID1.

Home use and products targeted towards it. Have moved to software RAID because it's good enough for that use, and general purpose. CPUs have gotten fast enough that they can meet the performance needs for those use cases. That doesn't mean hardware RAID is dead (nor will it be anytime soon).
Last edited by cpc13 April 3, 2024 at 04:23 PM.
1
Mar 31, 2024 05:33 PM
66 Posts
Joined Apr 2013
SlickDealAddictionMar 31, 2024 05:33 PM
66 Posts
Quote from RelaxedRose979 :
The issue is 10 drives sharing the 10Gbps USB 3.1 gen 2 interface. Hardware RAID is no longer recommended as software can keep up and gives the flexibility in not being paired with a specific controller or losing all of your data.

The Mini PCs we normally see listed max out with 2.5Gbps networking. So this would be able to keep up and saturate the pipe. If you needed more bandwidth, having separate direct SATA connections would be needed, likely with some type of external SAS connection.

10 drives is very large, unless you are going for extremely cheap small drives to fill the array. IMO it's better to use larger drives as each drive consumes power to run. UGreen has a Kickstarter going right now that has some really crazy deals for NASes that are supposed to ship in June. You might be more bang for your buck there.

Also, anyone thinking of using this many drives, Go with at least one parity disk, or even better two. The chance of data loss increases as you move to more and more drives. Not caring about movies on a single 10TB drive... fine. Not caring about 180TB, that's going to be a much larger pain to replace everything.
Is UGREEN a credible company? Worried about dumping 454$ on a 4bay to find out they disappeared? some people don't read the disclaimer you have to check when you sign up. "I understand that rewards or reimbursements aren't guaranteed by either Kickstarter or the creator" not that I don't want to donate to China's cause. 🤣
Last edited by SlickDealAddiction March 31, 2024 at 10:39 AM.
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Mar 31, 2024 05:36 PM
53 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
binaryblitzMar 31, 2024 05:36 PM
53 Posts
Quote from RelaxedRose979 :
The issue is 10 drives sharing the 10Gbps USB 3.1 gen 2 interface. Hardware RAID is no longer recommended as software can keep up and gives the flexibility in not being paired with a specific controller or losing all of your data.

The Mini PCs we normally see listed max out with 2.5Gbps networking. So this would be able to keep up and saturate the pipe. If you needed more bandwidth, having separate direct SATA connections would be needed, likely with some type of external SAS connection.

10 drives is very large, unless you are going for extremely cheap small drives to fill the array. IMO it's better to use larger drives as each drive consumes power to run. UGreen has a Kickstarter going right now that has some really crazy deals for NASes that are supposed to ship in June. You might be more bang for your buck there.

Also, anyone thinking of using this many drives, Go with at least one parity disk, or even better two. The chance of data loss increases as you move to more and more drives. Not caring about movies on a single 10TB drive... fine. Not caring about 180TB, that's going to be a much larger pain to replace everything.
Having only single disk parity on a 10 drive jbod array would be a weird choice. Definitely agree with you on having multiple parity drives.

I'd go RAID6 with 18TB drives. Gives you two drive failure (so you could continue using it with one drive out) and 144TB usable. Personally I think I'd rather have two 5 drive arrays in two locations, but that really comes down to what you're storing.

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