I’m looking to replace a 2013 Mac Mini running Proxmox. Just curious if anyone has one of these or anyone heard of any negatives about them? Watched a bunch of videos and outside of a lack of 10G Ethernet, it seems to be well received!
I’ve got Intel N100 version and so far it works pretty good with Proxmox and Ubuntu guest with full SATA controller passthru and ZFS. Only using it for few days though.
Looks like it’s a i226-v nic, which uh, has a reputation for being kinda shit.
It’s not a universal problem, but it’s probably something to keep in mind.
Thanks for the heads up, my Mini’s NIC is totally F’d so I’m using a USB adapter, I’d like to avoid having to do that again, but the WTR Pro does have 2 RJ45 Ethernet ports which is better than the Mini has.
I don’t really think it’s necessarily a deal breaker, but it’s caused a lot of people a lot of nagging little issues and might be worth making sure you’re not going to run into anything.
I’m super stoked at the appearance of the nas appliance form factor with hardware that’s got performance that isn’t rotten potato level.
Next rebuild I do is certainly going to be one of these things, though that’s probably a billion years away since my current nas is hilariously overpowered.
If it is cheap go for it. However, if it is the same cost as building your own then skip it as that’s not even name brand hardware.
You can get a small form factor motherboard and a cheap case for not to much money.
It’s $400 before tax with no SSD or RAM, so I’d need to get SSD, RAM and HDDs. What’s your thoughts on the specs at that cost? As the other comments point out, its an AM4, so it might make more sense to build something instead!
That’s a little steep but not as bad as I was thinking. If you are looking for the best bang for buck go with a old enterprise workstation off of eBay. They have limitations but cost wise that’s the best in my experience.
For building a new system I would go for a cost effective motherboard and CPU and then get (or build) a NAS case. You don’t need a lot of horse power from the sounds of it anyway. Go for more cores and ram but be mindful of ram speeds.
My problem is this is an AM4 system using DDR4 memory… already outdated.
Alternatively: cheap second hand RAM.
That’s actually a good call. Does it make more sense for me to look for a AM5 system and future proof with DDR5?
It does, as DDR5 comes with rudimentary ECC protection builtin.
I have the WTR R7 (N100 model 2 bay) and I can’t really complain. It was fairly cheap and it does what it says it does. Power draw with 2 2.5" SSD’s is about 11W average, but the RYzen one will be more.