QNAP TBS-464 NVME Server: After 3+ Month Review
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- Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
- Talking about my experience using the QNAP TBS-464 server, after 3 month of 24/7 operation, I have decided to unplug and put it back into the box, for the time being.
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#qnap #tbs464 #nvmeserver - Наука та технологія
Looks like the plastic was not removed.
did you take the tape off the thermal pads
Is there a reason you did not use the included M.2 SSD heatsinks?
Good question 😊
Where are the heatsinks for the NVME drivers. I have the older version of this nas and it came with heat sinks for the drives. That may be why the driver are running really hoy.
Yes. What did he do to the heatsinks?! A frischhaltefolie is not doing the job!
I would suggest a few things; First, remove the labels Especially on the bottom. Ensure all of the ventilation holes are indeed not taped over.
2. Don't botch thermal pads back together; replace the pads; Get the right thickness and keep a few spare around. The more squishy, the better. There's some that is made of a silicone grease, usually grayish in color. ;)
3. It's easy to get copper heat sinks that are really thin, and you'd mount them facing the bottom side of the device, where those ventilation holes are on the bottom of the NAS.
4. The device is already handicapped with 2.5G network ports; go with slower NVME drives as such should put out less heat with minimal performance impact.
5. If the device supports a ram upgrade, do it. Worth the cost considering the cost of this unit.
I think your fan is running on high because the unit senses that excess heat; thermal pads, and heat sinks to help pull out the heat and put it in the air should help a lot.
Use one of the following tacts to help improve cooling.
a.Put on self-adhesive feet and raise the device EVEN more. Doing this helps reduce dust to a degree, and also helps cooling from the bottom.
b.Wire rack; I use wire shelving units at times as the bottom is exposed, and helps improve cooling. Always metal racks; never plastic; prefer paint or chrome over other coatings.
c.Make a stand to allow the device to stand on its side; This increases the amount of surface area that really can help improve cooling. Just keep the device off from "stacks of heat" (other devices putting out heat ) and off from non-heat-conductive surfaces like WOOD. If you have to put it on a non-heat-conductive surface, add high self adhesive feet to improve the devices height. Even an 1/8th of an inch helps;; a quarter inch does wonders.
My preference nowadays is a wire shelving rack !!! Less dust collection; more airflow around devices. No jerry rigged stands.. ;)
I do use rubber bumper pads that raise some of my devices by about .38 inch (10mm )
In some respects, it sounds like this NVME NAS is louder than my 16 bay NAS that has 12 spinning hard disks in it.
I've been considering something like this NVME NAS ( as I really don't need a 48TB NAS ) and would like something smaller; but heat and noise are both no-go's for me. Thanks for your review. I really like cool and quiet. I'd be quite content with 12 to 24 TB. (currently have 84.)
I have this same device and it is running cool and quiet.
Running any containers or virtual machines?
No.
I don't think you mentioned that the top gets hot? lol