ddrueding
Fixture
Boss' place. Several TVs run off single receivers, so the job wasn't as bad as it could have been.
Amazon. I'd hold off until I hear back from their tech. He wanted to talk to me yesterday, but I was busy spending 10.5 hours installing 15 DirecTV receivers in a large house.
I see out of stock at the egg, or did you buy the 16GB version? I'm not seeing $200 worth of difference from 8GB in the NAS, especially for my uses.
Did you find out anything else? If I buy 8gb does all RAM need to be replaced together for 16GB?
I'm pretty sure they have a restocking fee on most items. Amazon is pretty good if you want to do that, but if you abuse their return policy by doing it too often they will ban you.Does anyone return to the egg if the product sucks but is not defective? I don't know where to buy it with a return policy.
So, anything happened to resolve your issue? Did they access remotely your NAS to check what's wrong?QNAP tech support responded and want to remote into the machine using TeamViewer. We'll see what they have to say.
Replacing the fan will of course void the warranty. Any tempering of the internal components will.Can I replace the fans with slower ones or add some controller to make them slower (~800 RPM) without the system going bonkers or voiding the warranty? Thanks.
Maybe he was planning to cool it. :dunno:I can't see heating the NAS helping, Lunar.
No, it was the network setting that ranges from 1500 to 9000.
Do you use it?
So Windows will have a MTU setting for the 520DA2? There is nothing on the network but the NAS and two computers on separate 10GbE cables.
The GbE ports are set to 1500 and I would not change settings since that is on a switch with 6-7 devices plugged in.
Yes, there should be an option under that network adapter's properties for MTU. Open the normal network properties dialog and select the Configure button. Switch to the advanced tab and look for either MTU or Jumbo packet in the list of advanced options. Select the item so that you can make the change. If those are the only devices on the network (or if it's a point to point) then feel free to set them both to MTU of 9000.
For some reason the WOL does not seem to work over the 10GbE. Perhaps that is normal because the port is dead when off? The data always goes over the slow path when both the GbE and 10GbE are connected, so that is not an option. I want to have the NAS over in the corner and don't want to reach down there to turn it on every time.
No matter what I do the default goes back to the GbE after the power is off. Is it possible to connect two switches in series, using one to turn on or off the access to the main switch? I would apply AC power to the secondary switch just for the WOL and they turn it off during the boot process.
The red light would not turn off until after the reboot. It's not too bad for a cheap RAID 6 NAS with 62% full 8TB 5400RPM drives. Of course it is only for use as the backup target.
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Rather than use auto-negotiate, can you set both adapters to 10000Mb fixed speed? I don't fully understand your setup to know why you're looking to connect up two separate switches. Is this to keep one adapter online while the other is powered off just to keep them set to 10Gb?
The 4K IOps is pretty low especially if it's not random 4k. I think that's like 375/IOps. What is the stripe size for your RAID 6 volume?
Is a hot spare rotating or is it just in the NAs waiting for another drive to croak? Do you guys use the hot spares?
As a reminder, RAID5 can afford to lose one drive. During the time the array is degraded you are at risk of array collapse and losing all data. The time to rebuild is a function of the amount of data you have PLUS how long it takes you to replace the drive. A hot spare takes the urgency out of the emergency. I want to do this every chance I can.