B&H Photo Video has
UGREEN NASync DXP4800 Plus 4-Bay NAS for
$519.99.
Shipping is free.
B&H Photo Video also has
UGREEN NASync DXP4800 4-Bay NAS for
$439.99.
Shipping is free.
UGREEN NAS has
UGREEN NASync DXP4800 Plus 4-Bay NAS for
$519.99.
Shipping is free.
UGREEN NAS also has
UGREEN NASync DXP4800 4-Bay NAS for
$439.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
gourgi18 for finding this deal.
DXP4800 Plus Specs:- Drive Bays: 4-Bay (SATA)
- Operating System: UGOS Pro
- CPU Model: 8505
- CPU Brand & Architecture: Intel X86 12th Generation Intel® Pentium® Gold 5 Cores 6 Threads
- Memory (RAM): 8GB DDR5
- ODECC: Supported
- Expandable RAM (max): 64GB
- Flash Memory (System Disk) SSD 128GB
- SATA Drive Bays: 4
- M.2 SSD Drive Slots: 2
- RAID: JBOD/Basic/0/1/5/6/10
- Maximum Storage: 136TB (4x 30TB + 2x 8TB)
- LAN Ports (RJ45): 1x 2.5GbE, 1x 10GbE
- High-Speed USB Ports (Front Panel): 1x USB-C, 1x USB-A (both 10Gb/s)
- High-Speed USB Ports (Rear Panel): 1x USB-A (5Gb/s)
- USB 2.0 (Rear Panel): 2x USB-A (480Mb/s)
- SD Card Reader: SD 3.0
- HDMI: 4K
- Product Dimensions: 10.1" × 7.0" × 7.0"
- Power Consumption: 42.36W (drive access) 18.12W (drive hibernation)
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Solid deal since it's been at 629.99 the past week...and research seems like it's worth the extra few bucks over the reggie 4800 model.
If you like Synology DSM but want to run it on other hardware you can by way of xpenology.
Either was this appears to be a decent price for the hardware.
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Stay away from new Synology units as starting this year, you will be required to only use certified hard drives which as of right now is their own brand. There is a good YouTube channel called nascompares that might be worth looking at.
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HDDs from the gray market can be misrepresented: https://www.tomshardwar
If you're using an "unsupported" hard drive with an already existing Synology NAS system and migrate it to a new Plus model, you can continue using it without any restrictions. So, you can first set up a non-Synology hard drive in an older Synology NAS system (or ask someone with one to do it for you), and then you can "migrate" the empty drive to your new one, thus saving you some money.
https://slickdeals.net/f/18391537-terramastr-f4-424-pro-4bay-nas-intel-n305-cpu-16gb-ram-20-off-save...
They are making slow and steady improvements, but honestly, I had hoped they would be further along by now. I can count on my hands the number of third-party apps in the UGOS app store, and many of those just use Docker.
That's the bad. The good is that since UGOS is basically Debian under the hood, you can pretty easily install Debian packages. As I mentioned above, it also has Docker, so that gives you a lot of options as well.
And, as a commenter below noted, you can run other OSes on the hardware—TrueNAS, Unraid, etc.—so if UGOS is too primitive for your use case, these are alternatives that do not void your warranty (I'm not aware of any other vendor that allows this).
What sold me, though, was the hardware. I could have built a comparable DIY solution but the cost was about the same and the benefit with the DXP line is it is warrantied as a whole unit, so I wouldn't need to worry about dealing with individual vendors. And—again—if I found UGOS to be too restrictive, I could still run TrueNAS, so it was a win-win in my book.
Full disclosure: I'm still running UGOS, despite its limitations. For the core things it works well enough for me for now, but I'd love encryption and built-in VPN support.
Also, the DXP has a 10Gbe port, for faster network connectivity, though—obviously—you'd need a switch that supports that speed. I do, so that was a plus for my decision to go the DXP route.
I believe the DXP also has Gen 4 PCIe vs. the Gen 3 of the F4-424.
The F4 come with more RAM (16GB vs. the 8GB of the DXP), though. It is an easy upgrade on the DXP, but that does factor into the cost.
Other than that, they are very similar. Without knowing more about your use case, I would probably direct you to the DXP vs. the F4-424, as it is a bit more future proof.
I can't speak to the Ugreen OS as I went with Unraid right off the bat.
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