Hi Williewonka,
Thanks for the info, I will definitely implement a Raid Mirror. Is this something you can implement on any NAS or is it only available on certain NAS units? Sorry, but I'm a rookie at this right now.
Thanks,
Tim
DIGITAL HIGH-RES AUDIO SYSTEM -HELP PLEASE
The spec on the NAS will state whether it has RAID quite clearly - you only need "RAID 0" - the ability to mirror. The D-Link NAS supports Raid and are very easy to setup. You might want to go to a good computer store since there are better quality drives suited to raid - only a couple of bucks more, but will last much longer that drives suited to desktop computers The Seagate Constellation line of drives are "enterprise drives" suited to Raid. They are not as fast as other drives but very durable - 2 Tb $135 or thereabouts. Take a look at the seagate site for details Regards |
Willie, a slight correction if I may. I think you meant to say "RAID 1 -- the ability to mirror." Regarding wireless vs. wired, I agree with the others that wireless can be problematical in SOME circumstances, depending on the quality of the wireless devices, where they are located relative to each other, possible interference from other wireless equipment in your own or a neighbor's house, what channel is being used, etc. However, I would not necessarily rule it out. For example, I have been using a Squeezebox Touch for about a year and a half, wirelessly connected to an EnGenius EAP350 wireless access point (which is not a router; it is just an access point, and it works in conjunction with a separate router that it is wired to). The access point and the Squeezebox are in very different parts of the house. I have not had a single dropout in that year and a half. I should add, though, that the nearest neighbors are a couple of hundred feet away. Also, if it has any relevance, I just use it for Internet radio, not for playing computer files. Good luck as you proceed! Regards, -- Al |
Al - thanks for the correction - it is raid 1. My situation regarding neigbours - I have between 4 and 10 routers active depending on the time of day from surrounding households, and changing channels never completely fixed the problem. Add to that some of the older cordless telephone systems in the neighbourhood, which I'm told can also contribute to dropouts and my number of dropouts were as high as several per hour depending on the number of active routers. The number of dropouts also went up depending on the the size of the music file e.g. mp3 had very few, 24/192 had several, which makes sense to me. Direct connection seemed to have fixed this and using Audirvana also ensures no dropouts because it loads the track into memory before playing. Haven't had a dropout since. Regards |
Hi Al and Willie (or is that Mr. wonka to me?), I really appreciate your assistance. I've decided to up my budget a bit, to $1,600 or so, and buy the Oppo BDP-105 and NAS hopefully within a week. The Oppo is a definite buy after reading a lot of great owners' feedback and professional reviews. It just seems like the ideal unit for my situation. As to the NAS, I'm currently considering 2: The Synology DS213j ($199 on Amazon) with 2 Seagate Constellation 2TB hard-drives (about $135 ea.) which would be a total of about $470. The Seagate STBN4000100 with 2 2TB hard-drives included is $322 on Amazon. The Seagate looks like the better value but I don't know what the differences are in user interfaces, customer support and compatibility compared to the Synology. I understand the mirroring is not the same as backing up, more like redundancy, and will look for this feature on whatever NAS I consider. I believe both of the ones above allow for mirroring 0,1,5 and possibly more protocols. My main concern is how, and if, this is all going to work together: laptop, Oppo and NAS. I have some questions that I need further assistance with: 1. Should I buy the less expensive Seagate or the recommended Synology? 2. Having the laptop wireless is very convenient and being limited to a 12-14ft USB cable is not working well. The Oppo and NAS will be set right next to each other in my rack. Our only close neighbor is within 100 ft and I know their LAN extends into our house (at times, their network displays as an available network choice on my laptop). Can I reduce dropouts,and will it function properly, if I use a short USB cable from the NAS to the Oppo and leave the laptop connection wireless? 3. Do I use the laptop as the controller via JRiver to download and play hi-rez files, or am I not understanding how the downloading/playback is controlled? 4. Any good websites to learn about choosing and setting up this stuff? I'm watching the Denver-New England game right now and the 5.1 surround system is sounding great, even with my 20 yr old Parasound pre/processor. I think the new system will probably sound at least as good for ht and much better with discs and downloads. Plus I'm gaining a bluray player as a bonus. Thanks again to all, Tim |