Just a couple of comments:
RAID 5 is to be avoided at all costs.  This is a complicated topic but the
short answer is that I don't know anyone for whom RAID5 is a good idea.
 Raid 1, 10, and 6 are the levels that interest you.

"Green" branded drives are fine since most NAS enclosures do not use a
hardware RAID controller.  The vast majority use some version of embedded
Linux and the software RAID stack mdadm (not to be confused with the
fakeraid stuff, mdadm is awesome).  Having said that I usually purchase WD
"Red" drives solely for the longer warrenty (I actually don't care about
the other features, most of the features are marketing fluff that you are
not going to be using anyway).

For purchasing suggestions I am a fan of the Synology line of NAS devices.
Hi Joe,
Having a single drive external, while better than nothing is way not as good
as having a 2 bay / drive raid 1 enclosure. in terms of safety i am
talking. A
step up in terms of safety would be a 4 drive raid 1 or 5 enclosure. A step
up
in all these cases, is having the drives/enclosures as a NAS device sitting
in
a different place (safer?) than the backed up computers are, and connected
with
the network to them.

Most 2-4 drive enclosures (that come with drives) state the capacity as a
raid
0, which can be tricky for the uninitialized. A raid0 configuration will not
increase safety, in fact it will reduce it drastically, so when looking at
populated 2 - 4 drive units, as a rule of thumb, half the capacity for 2
disk
units (to get the capacity in raid 1 terms). the 4 disk raids a bit more
complicated. you can treat them as 2 pairs, this halving the capacity, or
as a
4 disk raid 5, in which case you get 75% of the total disk capacities.

For direct connect enclosures, look for e-sata capability, look for usb3 ,
specially if your backed up computer has these ports, you can not go wrong
with these features.

For NAS devices, look for the once that have dual gigabit Ethernet
connectors,
they usually perform better speed wise.

If you are going to invest on a 2-4 or more drive external nas unit, think
about augmenting it with UPS (uninterrupted power supply), for capacity, add
up the power rating on the NAS unit. If you want to skimp out on the UPS,
just
get a surge protector, it's your data after all.

Here are some pointers:

Single drive, direct connection:
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX45802
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX22324

Dual drive, direct connection:
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX40154
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX43461

4 drive, direct connection:
(do consider the noise of 4 drives spinning near your desktop)
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX30898/Reviews
and of course the drobo:
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX42950

Single drive, NAS:
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX32282
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX33812

Dual drive, NAS:
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX47066
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX49052

4 drive , NAS:
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX39139
http://www.memoryexpress.com/Products/MX49654

And you still need to get your drives.
Generally look for NAS / Storage rated drives, Green rated drives tend to
perform poorly in raid environments.
Desktop / workstation rated drives will do fine, specially under low/medium
stress situations.




On May 29, 2014 Thursday 14:22:21 Joe S wrote:
> I was reading the reviews of external hard drives. I found a
> number had problems with reliability. I don't have experience
> with these, but need something for backing up my home computer.
> Are there any that can be recommended? I also thought of getting
> an enclosure and a regular drive in case I have to replace it
> in the future. Probably 1 TB or so.
>
>
> Thanks for suggestions
>
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