Thank you all for your ideas. I have given it more thought based on your comments and suggestions.
Of the 750GB NAS capacity, the majority of space is used by the backup files from our 2 computers. The backup protocol has me storing several versions of each computer. The shared files (the purpose of the NAS) is only about 100 GB.
So, here is what I am thinking. I would appreciate your comments:
- Keep the 750GB NAS; keep in Raid 1 configuration for redundancy
- Buy 2 or 3 TB, single disk NAS (such as Western Digital My Cloud).
- Put the shared files (pictures, music, etc) on the new 2TB NAS for sharing and cloud access.
- Use the 2 TB NAS to hold the computer backup files
- Copy the shared files from the 2TB NAS to the 750GB NAS as backup (or use the back up program)
- Weekly, copy the latest full back up from the computers from the 2 TB NAS to the 750GB NAS
This gives me the capacity I need; provides the cloud access I wanted; provides for back up and redundancy; and is a fairly low cost (~ $180 for 3 TB My Cloud vs. 2 x 2TB hard drives @ ~ $100 each)
Again, thank you for your comments.
Cheers,
Larie
Hi Larie,
I have five Hard Drives for Backup, but only 4 actually installed in the containers. One container is the Storage Central Unit from Netgear and the other is the D-Link DNS-323 Unit that contains to Hard Drives not in Raid configuration. They are mainly to store TV Programs for later watching and deleting.
Anyway, you lose valuable Hard Drive Space for multiple copies. (I'm one to talk!)
If you are not a business, then you don't need to use a Raid configuration.
And once you're dead, what difference does it matter. (Hillary Clinton).
One copy is on your Hard Drive and the other copy is on the NAS Hard Drives.
I use two main Backup Programs. One is SmartSync Pro at
http://www.smartsync.com/ and the other being Acronis True Image at
http://www.acronis.com/en-us/personal/pc-backup/For Acronis, I don't bother with Incrementail Backups, but do a Full Backup every month.
When I download programs from the Web, I always download to My Briefcase Folder, rather than a Download Folder, in order to have fast access to the Download, because it is on the Desktop.
And when I do finish installing the program, I always make a Backup of the Download program, then delete it from the Briefcase Folder, since it is already installed. I made a backup, so the operating system's partition can remain small, to create a smaller Image File. One doesn't need to backup large Downloads in the Image Backup.
Any additional NAS Devices you buy, make sure you can plug it into your Router to have access from all computers.