ianbeeldens Posted February 13 Posted February 13 Hi everyone, I am a total newbie when it comes to a nas and hexos so i would be looking for a nas brand or model that is cheap and is supported for hexos. I am from the Netherlands I already have some hard drives to use would ideally want 2-4 drives to start off and see how it all works and what i can use it for. Would have a budget of a max €100 Quote
Sonic Posted February 13 Posted February 13 Hi @ianbeeldens, do you already have a case? €100 is not much. I think refurbished hardware is the way to go. Can you tell a little bit more about what you want to do with HexOs? Quote
ianbeeldens Posted February 13 Author Posted February 13 Hey, Thanks for your reply. No I sadly only have the drives. I would be looking for it to hopefully run my home assistant as that is currently running on a pi 4 and file back up/remote access to files. I know it isn't a lot of money but it is just to try it out if it works for what I want. Quote
Mobius Posted February 13 Posted February 13 Your best bet is to check ebay or your local versions of craigslist/facebook marketplace for used gear. Quote
ianbeeldens Posted February 13 Author Posted February 13 2 minutes ago, Mobius said: Your best bet is to check ebay or your local versions of craigslist/facebook marketplace for used gear. okay so that would be a used nas or a pc? and then my original question would still be which brands work with hexos Quote
PsychoWards Posted February 13 Posted February 13 Used NAS are probably more expensive then used PCs. Also with an used NAS you might not have any upgrade possibilities. Additionally a Synology NAS will not work, because you are limited to there own OS. Also you nees to make sure to get a NAS with enough memory (RAM) and x86 CPU. So your best bet, in my opinion is to go for a PC, because there you have less restrictions and less things to worry about, only that it meets the minimum recommendation (especially the 8GB memory bit) and that it's not using a Realtek NIC (network chip, because most of them are not supported by truenas). Last but not least, don't forget that you need a dedicated boot drive, the boot drive cannot be used as a data drive, it only contains the OS and you cannot store anything on it. Ideally you would use a small SSD. A HDD would also work but not an USB stick. Quote
ianbeeldens Posted February 13 Author Posted February 13 1 minute ago, PsychoWards said: Used NAS are probably more expensive then used PCs. Also with an used NAS you might not have any upgrade possibilities. Additionally a Synology NAS will not work, because you are limited to there own OS. Also you nees to make sure to get a NAS with enough memory (RAM) and x86 CPU. So your best bet, in my opinion is to go for a PC, because there you have less restrictions and less things to worry about, only that it meets the minimum recommendation (especially the 8GB memory bit) and that it's not using a Realtek NIC (network chip, because most of them are not supported by truenas). Last but not least, don't forget that you need a dedicated boot drive, the boot drive cannot be used as a data drive, it only contains the OS and you cannot store anything on it. Ideally you would use a small SSD. A HDD would also work but not an USB stick. okay thank you for the information that really helps, totally get that a pc would be less restrictive for the requirements and thanks for the bit about the boot drive i didn't know about that. Quote
ubergeek Posted February 13 Posted February 13 I could say you could find a used dell / hp /lenovo surplus pc and add a pair of drives for a good start. I would stay with 4th gen intel or newer would put you in the right range. Hdds might be a hard one to manage at this price point but a pair of 2tb or 3tb might be able to be found to stay in budget Quote
ianbeeldens Posted February 13 Author Posted February 13 1 minute ago, ubergeek said: I could say you could find a used dell / hp /lenovo surplus pc and add a pair of drives for a good start. I would stay with 4th gen intel or newer would put you in the right range. Hdds might be a hard one to manage at this price point but a pair of 2tb or 3tb might be able to be found to stay in budget yes i am currently looking at like workstation desktops and i already have some 2tb hard drives ready to go. Quote
Mobius Posted February 14 Posted February 14 I'm in agreement with @PsychoWards and @ubergeek 2 Quote
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