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frontpageRed_Liz | Staff posted Jan 07, 2026 07:49 PM
frontpageRed_Liz | Staff posted Jan 07, 2026 07:49 PM

5-Bay ORICO USB-C Hard Drive Cloner/Duplicator Hard Drive Aluminum Docking Station

+ Free Shipping

$66

$110

40% off
Amazon
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ORICO Direct US Store via Amazon has 5-Bay ORICO USB-C Hard Drive Cloner/Duplicator Hard Drive Aluminum Docking Station (6656C3-C) on sale for $109.99 - $44 (apply promo code 7FFQMKO4 at checkout) = $65.99. Shipping is free.
  • Note: Promo codes are typically for one-time use and don't always apply seamlessly. If you run into this issue, refresh the page, re-enter the code, or revisit the cart page.
Thanks to staff member Red_Liz for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Enables simultaneous duplication of four copies through a single button without the need for connection to a computer
  • Suitable for a 2.5, 3.5 inch SATA SSD HDD with a max of 5x20TB capacity
  • Employs a 2-in-1 cable with USB 3.2 Type-C to C interface to maximize the speed of the SATA interface

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff

Original Post

Written by Red_Liz | Staff
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
ORICO Direct US Store via Amazon has 5-Bay ORICO USB-C Hard Drive Cloner/Duplicator Hard Drive Aluminum Docking Station (6656C3-C) on sale for $109.99 - $44 (apply promo code 7FFQMKO4 at checkout) = $65.99. Shipping is free.
  • Note: Promo codes are typically for one-time use and don't always apply seamlessly. If you run into this issue, refresh the page, re-enter the code, or revisit the cart page.
Thanks to staff member Red_Liz for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Enables simultaneous duplication of four copies through a single button without the need for connection to a computer
  • Suitable for a 2.5, 3.5 inch SATA SSD HDD with a max of 5x20TB capacity
  • Employs a 2-in-1 cable with USB 3.2 Type-C to C interface to maximize the speed of the SATA interface

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff

Original Post

Written by Red_Liz | Staff

Community Voting

Deal Score
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Top Comments

DontTaxBeer
8903 Posts
648 Reputation
there seems to be major issues with this using the JMicron JMS576 controller a noted in the reviews. i'll pass.

11 Comments

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Jan 07, 2026 07:52 PM
1,295 Posts
Joined Jun 2009
dru500aJan 07, 2026 07:52 PM
1,295 Posts
Would this be useful in upgrading to a bigger hard drive in a Synology has? Can I clone a smaller drive to a bigger drive and pop it back in? I imagine it's a bit more complicated than that.
Jan 07, 2026 08:14 PM
998 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
videotraderJan 07, 2026 08:14 PM
998 Posts
I think you can just install larger hard drives one at a time in your NAS and let raid rebuild your database. Probably hella time consuming depending on how large your current drives are. Check your raid settings to be sure it can rebuild. If it were me, I'd grab a large external drive, put everything from the nas on it, and then start with fresh drives on the nas and repopulate from the usb drive…. This way gives you a backup as well…
Jan 07, 2026 10:37 PM
563 Posts
Joined Sep 2006
SteelRingJan 07, 2026 10:37 PM
563 Posts
i assume you can just use this as a docking station to access various drives even if you are not using the cloning function
Yesterday 03:39 AM
385 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
CruzwebYesterday 03:39 AM
385 Posts
Quote from SteelRing :
i assume you can just use this as a docking station to access various drives even if you are not using the cloning function
Yup, exactly right.
Yesterday 03:59 AM
8,903 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
DontTaxBeerYesterday 03:59 AM
8,903 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank DontTaxBeer

there seems to be major issues with this using the JMicron JMS576 controller a noted in the reviews. i'll pass.
1
Yesterday 07:21 PM
2,484 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
elpablolvYesterday 07:21 PM
2,484 Posts
Thanks
Yesterday 07:32 PM
1,077 Posts
Joined Jul 2010
xlerateYesterday 07:32 PM
1,077 Posts
Quote from videotrader :
I think you can just install larger hard drives one at a time in your NAS and let raid rebuild your database. Probably hella time consuming depending on how large your current drives are. Check your raid settings to be sure it can rebuild. If it were me, I'd grab a large external drive, put everything from the nas on it, and then start with fresh drives on the nas and repopulate from the usb drive…. This way gives you a backup as well…
Except when your library is larger than single drive capacity. Currently sitting at 36TB across RAID5 on a Qnap. (4 x 12TB).

I have 5 x 20TB waiting for a new home and it seems getting a new NAS is the only solution.
1

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Yesterday 07:38 PM
998 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
videotraderYesterday 07:38 PM
998 Posts
Quote from xlerate :
Except when your library is larger than single drive capacity. Currently sitting at 36TB across RAID5 on a Qnap. (4 x 12TB).

I have 5 x 20TB waiting for a new home and it seems getting a new NAS is the only solution.

Well, you could get a 26 or 28 tb ext drive and that would get you most of the way. Also, much quicker to rebuild 10 tb than 36tb…..
Yesterday 09:46 PM
247 Posts
Joined Jun 2022
CalmHeart2Yesterday 09:46 PM
247 Posts
this can handle random size drives (storage and size lol) at the same time? just trying to find a spot to park all my random drives
Yesterday 10:16 PM
261 Posts
Joined Mar 2019
RogueVariableYesterday 10:16 PM
261 Posts
Quote from xlerate :
Except when your library is larger than single drive capacity. Currently sitting at 36TB across RAID5 on a Qnap. (4 x 12TB). I have 5 x 20TB waiting for a new home and it seems getting a new NAS is the only solution.
Now, if it were me... And I'm sure I'm not the best example when it comes to doing anything. I would buy two more matching 20 TB drives, copy your data to those two, then use your original 4 drives to build a new array before copying your data back on to them.

Then, after you were done, you would have two spare drives for the future in case a drive ever failed.

But usually my antics best serve as an example of what not to do. 🙂
Today 12:24 AM
193 Posts
Joined Feb 2006
bubkaToday 12:24 AM
193 Posts
Quote from dru500a :
Would this be useful in upgrading to a bigger hard drive in a Synology has? Can I clone a smaller drive to a bigger drive and pop it back in? I imagine it's a bit more complicated than that.
I have gone this route before with using a USB 3.0 do to SATA dock as a NAS/server expansion, they always end up going offline and requiring a restart or sometimes have data corruption issues with large/lengthy data transfers.

USB is just not made for this type of work.

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