Reply 1800 of 2261, by TrashPanda
Ozzuneoj wrote on 2023-02-26, 02:52:I haven't had a reason to go Gen4\Gen5 NVMe yet, but I have to say that it has been SO nice since I moved to all solid state in […]
TrashPanda wrote on 2023-02-25, 23:12:Bought a 8Tb Sabrent Rocket drive, 7100/6600 speeds, wouldn't normally buy a NVME this big but it for sure made a hell of a difference, just from a data access speed view it was worth it. Now I'm sitting here wondering if I can justify the cost of getting one for my personal PC 😁
Gaming is a perfectly good reason for a fast huge NVME . .right. (Actually might get a 2Tb one for the PS5, its main drive is such a paltry size ...)
I haven't had a reason to go Gen4\Gen5 NVMe yet, but I have to say that it has been SO nice since I moved to all solid state in my personal system. I've had an SSD+HDD setup since 2010, but last year I moved to all solid state, and then at some point one of my drives started having errors (a known problem with a certain batch of Samsung 870 EVO drives) so I used that as an excuse to swap some drives around and ended up with a 1TB SK Hynix P31 for my OS + games and a 2TB refurbished Samsung 970 EVO Plus for data.
I never have my system freeze while it waits for a drive to spin up. Everything is just "there".
Now, all my hard drives are just being used as redundant backups. I loaded one up with absolutely everything and gave it to a relative for safe keeping, so even if the data isn't absolutely current, I have one good offsite + offline backup of 25 years worth of my computing history. Hard drives still have a use. 😁
Oh yeah, I still have a big NAS box with spinning rust for onsite backups and cloud storage for critical data backups that I cant afford to lose, the NAS box is even located in a building separate from the main house so even in the event the house burns the data will still stand a good chance of being just fine. The 8Tb NVME was simply to help speed up local work flow and I can happily say it was worth the crazy cost but its not something I could recommend for your average home user if you cant write off the outlay as a business expense. Its simply to expensive to be worth it if its not going to return that money in some fashion, I feel the same way about halo GPUs honestly, that 4090 aint worth it if its not paying for itself.
The only issue I have is a full backup of the NAS itself, there really isn't any practical method to backup that much data other than to setup a backup NAS that mirrors the main one...something I'm considering as spinning rust is so cheap, once its mirrored the main NAS I just move it off site till I need to refresh the backup.