Backup by internal removable disks
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Backup by internal removable disks
I am planning a build, and I want to include a backup solution with removable hard disks in the main PC case (maybe even running continuously in the background).
It seems there are plenty of external HDD solutions out there, and few internal ones. This strikes me as stupid. Why would one add extra clutter outside (enclosure, cables, power supply), when space, power and data interfaces are already available within one's PC case ?
I plan to have one (or two) rotating disks within the home, and one in a bank safe. My questions are the following :
- Opinions on the general idea ?
- 3,5" or 2,5" ?
- Preferred racks ?
- How to protect the disk once outside the rack (notably against electrostatic shock) ?
- How to keep it cool and silent inside the rack ?
- Any risk to the connectors associated with inserting and taking out the disk daily ?
The way I see it :
- 3,5" is cheaper, but either you put it in a trayless rack (and it comes out with the electronics naked and unprotected), or you mount it in a closed tray (and you need ventilation, with those 40 mm fans included in racks which are probably horribly noisy).
- 2,5" is cooler and more silent, but the only rack I found with a tray to protect the disk is the Icy Box MB 663 USR-1S (sorry, I'm not permitted links). And I'm not even sure one can buy extra trays separately.
Thanks for your insight.
It seems there are plenty of external HDD solutions out there, and few internal ones. This strikes me as stupid. Why would one add extra clutter outside (enclosure, cables, power supply), when space, power and data interfaces are already available within one's PC case ?
I plan to have one (or two) rotating disks within the home, and one in a bank safe. My questions are the following :
- Opinions on the general idea ?
- 3,5" or 2,5" ?
- Preferred racks ?
- How to protect the disk once outside the rack (notably against electrostatic shock) ?
- How to keep it cool and silent inside the rack ?
- Any risk to the connectors associated with inserting and taking out the disk daily ?
The way I see it :
- 3,5" is cheaper, but either you put it in a trayless rack (and it comes out with the electronics naked and unprotected), or you mount it in a closed tray (and you need ventilation, with those 40 mm fans included in racks which are probably horribly noisy).
- 2,5" is cooler and more silent, but the only rack I found with a tray to protect the disk is the Icy Box MB 663 USR-1S (sorry, I'm not permitted links). And I'm not even sure one can buy extra trays separately.
Thanks for your insight.
Well one reason for making backups is in the case of unforeseen events, such as fire, theft etc. I have an external hard drive in a separate room, and once a week I pull it out and run a backup from my computer. At some point I'll probably put it in the building where I work.
If you stick all your drives in the same computer case, you're only preparing for issues like disk corruption, not theft/accident. I think that's one reason why.
Ideally, you'd know someone in a different city and do networked backups with that person. That way, if there's an earthquake there, his data are safe with you, and if a volcano erupts and takes down your house, your data are safe with him. That's probably overkill for most people though.
If you stick all your drives in the same computer case, you're only preparing for issues like disk corruption, not theft/accident. I think that's one reason why.
Ideally, you'd know someone in a different city and do networked backups with that person. That way, if there's an earthquake there, his data are safe with you, and if a volcano erupts and takes down your house, your data are safe with him. That's probably overkill for most people though.
Agreed. Therefore the bank safe (which needs walking, but never mind...). But most external solutions are meant to stand on your desk, a few feet away from your case. That's no protection against theft, fire, lightning or your roof caving in...atmartens wrote:
If you stick all your drives in the same computer case, you're only preparing for issues like disk corruption, not theft/accident. I think that's one reason why.
And I guess that's how most people use them.
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With external drives, you have the option of easily disconnecting them and moving them somewhere else between use, without having to open up your case each time and potentially damage something inside. If you're planning on moving the drive around a lot, a 2.5" notebook drive might be better, simply due to the better shock tolerance typically built into them. There's also often some degree of additional shock tolerance built into an external case, making it safer than handling a bare drive. If you need a Terabyte or more of storage though, 3.5" drives might be better simply due to their lower cost.
If you don't want desktop clutter, one option would be to route the backup drive's cable somewhere off the desk. Maybe have it go into a drawer from behind, or somewhere else concealed away. Most external 2.5" drives don't require a separate power cable, making that a bit easier to accomplish.
If you don't want desktop clutter, one option would be to route the backup drive's cable somewhere off the desk. Maybe have it go into a drawer from behind, or somewhere else concealed away. Most external 2.5" drives don't require a separate power cable, making that a bit easier to accomplish.
I've got one of these, it works well, and the Chinglish is hilarious:
http://www.scorptec.com.au/computer/33134-me-240
http://www.scorptec.com.au/computer/33134-me-240
Alleycat : thank you. I can see that your Welland rack is trayless. How do you protect your drives once removed ? Do you just toss them in a drawer with the electronics exposed ? Isn't there a risk to fry the board through electrostatic discharge ? Or just a risk of mechanically damaging some of the delicate parts ?
Has anybody used the Icy Box MB 663 USR-1S rack ? It holds a 2,5" drive in an enclosure, which can either be inserted in the PC case, or used as an external disk (USB or SATA).
Potsy : hopefully there are no car thieves where you live, but doesn't the inside of a car get quite hot at times in Australia ?
Has anybody used the Icy Box MB 663 USR-1S rack ? It holds a 2,5" drive in an enclosure, which can either be inserted in the PC case, or used as an external disk (USB or SATA).
Potsy : hopefully there are no car thieves where you live, but doesn't the inside of a car get quite hot at times in Australia ?
Before I had a disk server I used an eSATA docking station and a bunch of 3.5" HDDs. The HDDs are completely naked when used and needs to be handled with great care. But I stored the drives in plastic shells, the kind that Samsung ships their drives in. Protects the electronics while in transport and gives the drive some chance of surviving a small drop.
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I use an "Antec Easy Sata" trayless bay to swap bare 3.5" drives. It is fanless and I haven't had any temperature issues with any drive.
http://www.antec.com/Believe_it/product.php?id=MjA2OQ==
For bare drive storage, I use WiebeTech DriveBox cases:
http://www.wiebetech.com/products/cases.php
http://www.antec.com/Believe_it/product.php?id=MjA2OQ==
For bare drive storage, I use WiebeTech DriveBox cases:
http://www.wiebetech.com/products/cases.php
I guess you have all the advice you need but I'm posting anyway. Rotating discs out to an external location isn't a bad idea, although more troublesome than may be necessary. I have a two disc RAID1 array in my computer and a duplicate drive hooked up to my work computer across town which I keep up to date over the internet with Deltacopy.
Since you have a home backup, a bank safe might be a bit overkill for the third location unless the data on it is particularly sensitive. A friend's house or office would probably suffice.
Since you have a home backup, a bank safe might be a bit overkill for the third location unless the data on it is particularly sensitive. A friend's house or office would probably suffice.
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Thanks Mr. B., any extra advice is most welcome. I still think this backup niche is not properly addressed by vendors (non-enterprise users such as me, who are building their own PC, and prefer an internal solution rather than an external one).
You mentioned you backup to your workplace via the Internet : how fast is that ? What sort of link do you have ? What do you need on the other end ? Do you need an always-on computer ? If it's another person's PC, how much do you slow him down ?
Incidentally, as I envisioned it, my bank would not be my third backup location, but my second, since my home is my office.
You mentioned you backup to your workplace via the Internet : how fast is that ? What sort of link do you have ? What do you need on the other end ? Do you need an always-on computer ? If it's another person's PC, how much do you slow him down ?
Incidentally, as I envisioned it, my bank would not be my third backup location, but my second, since my home is my office.
Both my home and work PC have broadband internet. I don't know what the exact speed it but it seems to be on par with uploading things to my website which is limited to 200-ish kB/s, so I usually let it run overnight. On the rare occasion it was running while I was at work, I didn't notice any trouble outside of a slower internet browsing experience.
Both machines require deltacopy to be running. The "server," namely the work computer has a deltacopy windows service running in the background. At home you initiate the backups with the client program.
Both machines require deltacopy to be running. The "server," namely the work computer has a deltacopy windows service running in the background. At home you initiate the backups with the client program.
I'll have a look into this Deltacopy product...
Incidentally, I was planning to build a RAID 1 into my future PC, just like you. Everybody keeps telling you : your disk drive will fail some day, but nobody seems to equate this with "RAID 1 is a minimum requirement". I don't get it.
I was also planning to fit it with ECC memory, and, no, it won't be a server, and, yes, I'm a bit paranoid.
Incidentally, I was planning to build a RAID 1 into my future PC, just like you. Everybody keeps telling you : your disk drive will fail some day, but nobody seems to equate this with "RAID 1 is a minimum requirement". I don't get it.
I was also planning to fit it with ECC memory, and, no, it won't be a server, and, yes, I'm a bit paranoid.
That sounds like a good argument against RAID0, in which one disc failure destroys the array... but of course if you lose a disc in a RAID1 array you just replace it and the good disc(s) restore data to the replacement.Clairvaux wrote:Everybody keeps telling you : your disk drive will fail some day, but nobody seems to equate this with "RAID 1 is a minimum requirement". I don't get it.
Two HDDs cost more, draw more power and emits more noise. And RAID can be a source of problems in itself. For most people something like a script run at boot which backups the most important files, and making regular backups of other, less important data is sufficient. It is for me anyway.Clairvaux wrote:Everybody keeps telling you : your disk drive will fail some day, but nobody seems to equate this with "RAID 1 is a minimum requirement". I don't get it.