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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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#1
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8-TB Drive for RecordedTV: Anybody using?
My NAS box is getting tight on space and it seems logical to move RecordedTV from the NAS to my 24-7 PC that runs the SageTV server.
I've been Googling and it *sounds* like it should work Windows 7-wise - just format the partition as GPT and make sure the block size is the one that SageTV likes (64k?). Are there any if's, and's, or but's to this? GigaByte Z87X-UD3H-CF with 6 "Intel-Controlled" SATA ports that support 6 GB/s SATA. I figure access speed (one humongous drive vs multiple drives on the NAS) sb a non-issue considering Sage is currently happy going across my LAN to the NAS box. I can live with a drive failure - RecordedTV being a throwaway commodity in my scheme of things. Am I missing anything?
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Server: SageTV 9, Windows 10, i5 NUC Clients: HD200*3 over Cat5e Ethernet + 1 slightly flakey HD 300 + 1 HD200 remote at another residence Plugins: (none yet, looking for recommendations) Storage: NetGear Ultra-6 NAS 10 TB total w/dual redundancy. Plus 5tb QNAP for RecordedTV. Capture: 3 Silicon Dust HomeRun tuner boxes (6 tuners total) Program Source: OTA antenna |
#2
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I've got a Sage (Win7 x64) box that's been using an 8TB drive for Sage recordings for over 6 months. There was nothing magic about making it play nice w/Sage. It's an HGST 8TB NAS drive (in a non-NAS configuration) direct-attached to the MoBo SATA port (AHCI). Formatted GPT w/64K cluster size. The HGST 8TB disk is 7200 rpm and has a pretty big internal buffer (128MB) so coupled with it's higher aerial density, access speed isn't an issue for Sage. Yes, I know there's some debate about the wisdom of using a NAS disk in a non-NAS environment (due to the less-aggressive error-recovery nature of the disk f/w), but this doesn't seem like a big deal for storing something like recordings. Anyway, I've had enough experience with the HGST series of high-capacity disks to have a pretty good level of confidence in their reliability. Friendly advice: avoid (like the plague) any of the following for Sage (regardless of capacity): * "Surveillance" drives (e.g. WD Purple) * "Archive" drives (as found in the Seagate 8TB external drive box)
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System #1: Win7-64, I7-920, 8 GB mem, 4TB HD. Java-64 1.8.0_141. Sage-64 v9.2.1 ATSC: 2x HDHR-US (1st gen white) tuners. HD-200. System #2: Win7-64, I7-920, 8 GB mem, 4TB HD. Java 1.8.0_131. Sage v9.1.6.747. ClearQAM: 2x HDHR3-US tuners. HD-200. System #3: Win7-64, I7-920, 12 GB mem, 4TB HD. Java-64 1.8.0_141. Sage-64 v9.2.1 ATSC: 2x HVR2250; Spectrum Cable via HDPVR & USB-UIRT. 3x HD-200. |
#3
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I've been running a couple of seagate 4TB 2.5" hdds which I removed from their usb enclosures in both my Sage and wmc servers. They are a bit thicker than most 2.5" drives - have served me well for almost 2 years now. They can be purchased for around $109. I got the idea from servethehome.com. I've also used these for multiple desktop machines due to the low cost and small form factor. No failures yet.
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SageTV-V9(64bit): Win10/i3-4370/OpenDCT/HDHR-Quatro (OTA) AndroidTV+Miniclient: Nvidia Shield(x3)/FireTV-4K(x8) Channels-DVR:Win10/i3-4340/HDHR Quatro 4K/TVE(YTTV) |
#4
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I built a new server to celebrate my conversion to v9. I'm recording to a 2T SSD, and enjoying my first system with no spinning disks. Most recorded shows are deleted, but I move shows that I want to save to a NAS.
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Asus Z170Pro, I7 skylake, hyperthread off, Win 7 64 Ult, 32Gig, 2ea Hauppauge 2250, DTV SD & OTA, HD300 |
#5
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Although I'm still holding at the 4TB drive size at present myself, probably won't go beyond that until the SSD tech provides a larger/cheaper option. Might revisit it in about a year, as other considerations may come into play first, but it is where I drew my proverbial line for now. |
#6
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I recently started using a 5-bay Synology NAS with 4 8TB WD Red drives in a RAID 5 configuration, (giving me around 24TB of storage space), and so far, it's working great. As a bonus, I don't have to worry about explaining to my wife what happened to her episodes of, "Dancing With the Stars," if a drive goes bad.
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#7
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It is interesting to note that Seagate drives have often done poorly in these reports but the 8TB drives seem much better. And enterprise drives are no more reliable than regular consumer drives: Quote:
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New Server - Sage9 on unRAID 2xHD-PVR, HDHR for OTA Old Server - Sage7 on Win7Pro-i660CPU with 4.6TB, HD-PVR, HDHR OTA, HVR-1850 OTA Clients - 2xHD-300, 8xHD-200 Extenders, Client+2xPlaceshifter and a WHS which acts as a backup Sage server |
#8
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Right before summer I moved all Sage recordings and pointing to 2 8 TB drives I have on my network and works out well.
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#9
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Also large scale hosting providers like blackblaze operate in a completely different environment than most home users. When I have data mirrored on multiple different drive arrays, and a 24/7 tech staff proactively monitoring and managing things. The calculus of buying cheaper consumer grade drives that I'll probably retire long before I reach the (lower) MTBF number it provides becomes something worth pursuing. In the end, for them it probably is cheaper. But for a home user who isn't aggressively managing and monitoring their system, where reactive rather than proactive is expected and data redundancy(and thus recovery) is not assured, and further the drive may very well still be in use 5+ years from now, that MTBF number starts to matter a lot. Last edited by Monedeath; 09-13-2017 at 11:31 AM. |
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