

TerraMaster, a professional brand that specializes in providing innovative storage products including network-attached storage (NAS) devices, launches the TerraMaster F2-422 2-Bay Network-Attached Storage (NAS) featuring 10Gigabit Ethernet networking. For better and stable perofrmance, Seagate IronWolf NAS HDD’s or WD RED ones are recommended. Compatible with 3.5″ and 2.5″ SATA HDD, 2.5″ SATA SSD. Maximum Internal Raw Capacity: 32TB (16TB drive x 2). Features an aluminum-alloy shell and intelligent temperature control ultra-quiet fan, good in heat dissipation.Advanced Btrfs file system offering 71,680 system-wide snapshots and 1,024 snapshots per shared folder Real-time hardware transcoding of up to two concurrent 4K video streaming.AES hardware encryption engine encrypts shared folders and network data transmission to keep data from unauthorized access.Dual 1GbE LAN with failover and Link Aggregation support. 1x10GbE RJ45 port, blazingly fast speed of 410MB/s reading and 450MB/s writing.POWERFUL HARDWARE: Intel Apollo Quad-core 1.5GHz CPU, 4GB of RAM (expandable up to 8GB).Then the QNAP QSW-1105-5T when it becomes available will likely be the best option for your average home user wanting to upgrade their network speeds.Īt the time of writing the unmanaged XGS1010-12 is the most affordable option on the market I can find, it works as advertised and combining this with the super cheap EP-9635 NIC I was able to transfer files to and from my windows server at just under 280MB/s. The problem with these is that you will then need SFP network cards, so you need to buy used Mellanox ConnectX cards if you want any home of it being affordable. The Netgear GS110MX is just £145 it is a 10 port unmanaged switch with two of the ports being full 10GbE which would make this the cheapest option if you want to connect two computers via a switch (rather than direct) using CAT5a/6a/7.Īlternatively, if running fibre isn’t out of the question the MikroTik 326-24G-2S+RM offers 24 ports managed in a fanless design with an additional 2x 10Gbps SFP+ ports or the MikroTik CRS305-1G-4S+IN for about £130 with 4x 10Gbps SFP+ and one POE gigabit ethernet. The 2.5GbE port then caps at out around 280MB/s which in a lot of scenarios is as much as you need when transferring to mechanical drives. With me running a Blue Iris CCTV server, having the option to separate my network up into VLANs is a useful addition vs the unmanaged switch.īoth switches offer the same performance with the 10GbE ports offering around 900MB/s transfer speeds for large files when transferring via two NVMe drives. With the first four ports being in LAG 1 then LAG 2-4 being in pairs of ports next to each other. I am not the most experienced with link aggregation, but this switch works a little differently than my MikroTik, you only have 4 group options. Port-based QoS (the unmanaged switch has QoS but it is pre-defined based on the port number).Link Aggregation (MAS SA, DA, and SA+DA).Port management with speed selection, flow control and loop detection/prevention.There is no fancy cloud networking, it is LAN only, but it offers some significant benefits over the unmanaged option including: This is identical to the XGS1010, but it is managed. It is unmanaged, like the QNAP, and the SFP+ ports are not ideal for most home scenarios, but they are full 10GbE 10G/2.5G/1G Multi-Gigabit Ports Speed Support.When I ordered the QNAP I came across a recent release from Zyxel, the XGS1010, unlike the QNAP, it is available to buy right now and costs £129.99. Zyxel XGS1010-12 SFP+ to 10GbE RJ45 transceiver is an expensive upgrade The Asus XG-C100C is the cheapest 10GbE card which was recently just £80 on Amazon, however, you can now get the EDUP EP-9635 2.5GBase-T PCIe Network Adapter for just £29.99. The most notable launch recently is the QNAP QSW-1105-5T with its 5x 2.5GbE ports which was on sale via Amazon for £108 so £21.60 per port. I use the term multi-gig because as much as I would love to say 10GbE is getting affordable, the trend seems to be orientated to 2.5GbE.
