Final Thoughts

Since we did not have any set top media players, we could not test the functionality of the UPnP capability implemented into the ReadyNAS devices. However, from all of the other capabilities that we were able to see, both the ReadyNAS NV and the older X6 have an extremely high degree of configurability compared to some of the other desktop/small office network attached storage devices out there that we have come across.

At first glance, we were extremely impressed with the easier-to-use hot swap drive bay feature that Infrant implemented with this model, especially because the device contained so many enterprise-like features such as RAID hot swap where if a drive in an array fails, it can be easily replaced without the need to rebuild the array. Also, for those who have the X6 or even the 600 series ReadyNAS devices, if you are looking to upgrade to the NV, Infrant makes it simple by allowing you to move your current drive set to the new device without the need to rebuild the array because the same software is used on all devices.

Our benchmarks showed great improvement of the ReadyNAS NV over the X6 model, especially in the Iozone “write” tests. Transferring a 512MB or 1GB file showed increased performance over the X6, which was expected from what Infrant had told us. Though the read tests did not prove much of anything, it was clear from all of the synthetic tests that Infrant put a lot of effort into making the NV model easier to use in the desktop environment as well as perform better in all types of environments. SiSoft Sandra and Iometer as well as our own homebrew File Copy tests showed improvement in all areas, which is reason enough to go with the ReadyNAS NV over the X6 model.

The ReadyNAS NV comes in 3 flavors including a core unit with no drives at a retail price of $649, a 1TB (terabyte) version that retails for $1199, a 1.6TB version at $1699, and a 2TB version at $2299. The 2TB version includes four Seagate 7200.9 500GB hard drives and we wouldn’t be surprised to see the ReadyNAS supporting higher capacity drives as they come out. We can’t wait to see 3-4TBs sitting on our desktops soon!

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  • Iozone - Thursday, May 11, 2006 - link

    There is a bad link in the article:
    http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/storage/infant...">http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/storage/infant...
    File does not exist ...
    Any chance of getting the link fixed ?
  • dunnp - Saturday, March 18, 2006 - link

    So since the RAID performance was so good, what was the setup for the RAID?
  • byvis - Saturday, March 18, 2006 - link

    ...s939 has DDR2? :-)

    RAM: 1GB Corsair XMS4400 DDR2 (2x512MB)
  • WileCoyote - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    What brand/model Raid 5 controller was used with the Seagate drives?
  • randomlinh - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    could you imagine backing up that much data... oi...
  • Genx87 - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    Did you put any memory into this thing or just use the basic 64MB for the OS?
    Curious if you didnt, if the performance throughput would increase from a larger memory?
  • PuravSanghani - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    The ReadyNAS units come with a 256MB SO-DIMM module. However, transfer performance would be limited by the the NIC anyway.


    Purav
  • WileCoyote - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    was journaling turned off? I've heard that has a big impact on performance
  • Genx87 - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    Any chance they are planning on releasing an 8 part config?
    Read\write wasnt terribly impressive at 24MB\sec. That is hardly pushing the disks.
    But for what i need it for that is plenty. But the 4 disk limitation kind of turns me off.

  • WileCoyote - Friday, March 17, 2006 - link

    Doesn't look like they have plans for 8 drives - they seem more interested in downsizing and compacting. There is a lot of info in their forums. At first I was turned off by the 4 drive config but then I realized it would work since I could hotswap.

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