Jonsbo N6 NAS Case Released

Jonsbo N6 9-Bay NAS Case Coming Soon

The Jonsbo N6 is the latest entry in the company’s NAS oriented chassis range and introduces a more conventional tower layout while keeping the compact profile that has defined the N series. It offers space for nine drives, a choice of ITX or micro ATX motherboards, and support for both ATX and SFX power supplies. The design focuses on storage density, flexible component placement, and broad cooling support, while early user feedback highlights both the advantages of this layout and concerns around airflow across populated drive arrays.

 

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Jonsbo N6 NAS Case Design and Storage

The N6 uses a steel construction with a compact tower profile that measures three hundred and five millimetres wide, three hundred and fifty three millimetres deep, and three hundred and eighteen millimetres tall including the base. The layout presents a straightforward front to back airflow path with vented panels on multiple sides. The exterior follows the same plain industrial style found across the N series and shows no decorative features beyond the functional ventilation cut outs.

Inside, the drive system is the primary focus. The chassis accommodates up to nine storage devices in either three point five inch or two point five inch formats. This is provided through a tray based system rather than the rubber strap mounts used in previous models. The move to trays is intended to improve ease of installation and reduce vibration transfer, while also enabling a more rigid structure for the drive cage.

The N6 keeps the drive stack in a vertical position with two pre installed one hundred and twenty millimetre fans located directly behind the drive bay. These fans draw air from the case interior across the disks and push it toward the rear.

This arrangement is simple to maintain and suits slow turning fans, although the distance between the intake vents and the drive surfaces remains a factor in how effectively the drives can shed heat under sustained load.

Clearance for cables and power distribution is arranged around the drive column. The chassis uses a backplane with multiple individual connectors rather than a consolidated high density solution. This maintains compatibility with standard cabling but does not improve the airflow restriction created by the backplane structure itself. User feedback suggests that this region may become the warmest part of the case when all drive positions are populated.

Jonsbo N6 NAS Case Motherboard, PSU and PCIe Support

The N6 supports both ITX and micro ATX motherboards, which places it between the smaller N3 and N2 and the larger N5 in terms of platform flexibility. The internal frame leaves enough room for boards with multiple PCIe slots, allowing storage builders to use additional controllers or network adapters without relying on ITX limitations. The orientation of the motherboard tray also keeps all major connectors accessible even when the drive cage is fully populated.

Power supply placement is more flexible than in previous Jonsbo NAS cases. The N6 accepts either a full sized ATX unit up to two hundred and twenty millimetres or an SFX unit up to one hundred millimetres. The PSU can be installed in the upper or lower region of the chassis depending on component choice. This arrangement gives builders more freedom to balance cable routing, airflow, and space for larger GPUs or add in cards.

The case includes four PCI expansion slots. This is sufficient for a graphics card plus one or two additional cards such as HBA or 10GbE. Support for GPUs up to two hundred and seventy five to three hundred and twenty millimetres means that mid range cards fit comfortably, although very large triple fan cards remain outside the intended scope. For systems without a GPU, the space is adequate for controllers with extended PCBs or rear facing connectors.

Clearances around the CPU area allow for cooler heights between sixty five and one hundred and sixty millimetres depending on the chosen PSU configuration. Larger tower coolers require the PSU to be placed in the alternate position to avoid interference. This creates a predictable trade off between cooling hardware and power supply size but provides enough flexibility for both air and AIO setups.

Jonsbo N6 NAS Case Cooling and Ventilation

The N6 provides a wide set of fan positions, with mounting support on the front, left side, right side, rear, and directly beside the drive cage. The layout allows two front fans at either one hundred and twenty millimetres or one hundred and forty millimetres, two fans on each side panel at one hundred and twenty millimetres, a single rear fan at one hundred and twenty millimetres, and two one hundred and twenty millimetre units that ship pre installed behind the drive stack. This creates a total potential of nine fans, although actual airflow efficiency depends on how the interior pathways are used.

The most significant airflow path concerns the disks. The pre installed fans draw air across the drive bay, but the distance between the intake vents and the drive faces, as well as the obstruction created by the backplane, can restrict flow.

Community feedback from earlier N series layouts indicates that this region can become the thermal bottleneck when all drive positions are filled. The presence of additional intake positions on the front and sides gives users options to supplement the drive cooling, but the design may still require tuning based on workload and ambient temperature.

The N6 includes an integrated three port manual fan controller with three speed levels. This provides basic control for builders who prefer not to rely on motherboard based curves or who are using several fans connected through splitters. While simple, the controller suits the straightforward airflow design of the chassis and offers a fallback option for users configuring large storage arrays or low noise systems.

Jonsbo N6 – Pros and Cons of the new NAS Case

The N6 introduces a denser storage layout and more flexible internal configuration than earlier compact models in the series. It supports mainstream power supplies, allows the use of longer GPUs and additional PCIe cards, and moves to a more practical tray based drive system. The expanded fan placement and the inclusion of a manual controller give users a wider set of ventilation options.

• Nine drive bays in a compact tower format
• Choice of ITX or micro ATX motherboards
• Support for ATX or SFX power supplies with two placement positions
• Four PCIe slots with room for mid length GPUs or HBAs
• Multiple fan locations including two pre installed units behind the drives
• Integrated three speed fan controller
• Straightforward internal layout with easier drive installation compared to older strap based designs

The main concerns raised by early users relate to airflow through the drive area and the continued reliance on a backplane that restricts ventilation. Although the case offers many fan positions, the cooling efficiency across a fully populated drive stack may still require user modifications. The use of Molex and individual SATA power connections and the absence of intake fans by default also limit thermal performance for high density configurations.

• Backplane design reduces airflow across the drive surfaces
• No dedicated front intake fans included
• Cooling performance for nine populated drives may require user adjustments
• Reliance on Molex and multiple SATA power connectors rather than consolidated cabling
• No indication of filtration on intake areas
• Limited information on pricing and regional availability

Jonsbo N6 vs N5 vs N4 vs N3 vs N2 NAS Case

The N6 positions itself between the high capacity N5 and the smaller N4 and N3 by offering nine bays in a mid sized tower footprint. It improves motherboard and PSU flexibility over the N3 and N2 while maintaining a smaller profile than the N5. The primary differentiators across the series are storage density, motherboard support, GPU clearance, and cooling layout.

Model N6 N5 N4 N3 N2
Dimensions 305 x 353 x 318 mm 355 x 403 x 350 mm 286 x 300 x 228 mm 233 x 262 x 298 mm 222.5 x 222.5 x 224 mm
Material Steel Steel aluminum wood Steel wood Aluminum steel Aluminum steel
Drive Bays Nine drives Twelve drives Six drives Eight drives Five drives
Motherboard Support ITX MATX ITX to XL ATX ITX MATX ITX ITX
PCI Slots Four Eight Four Two One low profile
PSU Support ATX 220 mm or SFX 100 mm ATX 240 mm SFX 125 mm SFX 105 mm SFX 150 mm
CPU Cooler Height 65 to 160 mm Up to 160 mm Up to 70 mm Up to 130 mm Up to 65 mm
GPU Length 275 to 320 mm 325 to 350 mm Up to 230 mm Up to 250 mm Up to 197 mm low profile
Cooling Layout Up to nine fans Up to eleven fans One fan included Optional small fans One slim fan included
AIO Support 240 mm 240 or 280 mm Not listed Not listed Not listed
Weight 7.5 kg 7.5 kg 3.75 kg 3.9 kg 2.9 kg

The N6 adds a higher capacity option to Jonsbo’s compact NAS case range by pairing nine drive bays with support for micro ATX motherboards and full sized ATX power supplies. Its internal structure is straightforward and offers more flexibility than the company’s smaller models, although airflow across the drive area remains the defining limitation based on early observations. The design serves users who want a dense multi drive system without moving to a full tower enclosure, provided that attention is given to fan placement and thermal management.

When will the Jonsbo N6 Be Released, and where To Buy the N6 NAS Case?

The Jonsbo N6 has only just been announced by the brand and official availability is still TBC. Traditionally, these cases have been made available on eastern eTail outlets such as AliEpxress around 10 days after the official pages go live at Jonsbo, and around a month or so later on sites like Amazon globally (arguably at around 30-40% more expensive, as they factor in the international shipping – and the N6 will not be a small box! .You can find purchasing links for the Jonsbo N6 and the other cases in this series below. Availability varies by region, and some retailers list these models under different category headings, so check both local and international stores when comparing prices. AliExpress tend to appear first, but seriously always verify the model name and drive bay count before ordering, since several Jonsbo cases share similar exterior designs and the shopping UI of Aliexpress has a nasty habit of showing the wrong image for the product in question! Check them out below:

N2

Best for Low/Efficient NAS Deployment

Lowest Price Point

Quietest of the Range

Smallest Physical Footprint

Smallest Storage Capacity

Only 1 PCIe Card Slot and Half Height

N3

Best for  a Power NAS Build + Bigger CPU Cooling

Largest Storage Capacity + Full Size PCIe Cards

Best Prosumer Deployment

Best All Round for Storage vs Scale vs Price

BIG Size and oddly tall

TALL!

N4

Better MoBo Compatibility (MITX and MATX)

Best Size vs Storage Option + 4x PCIe Slots

Most Conventially Aesthetically Appealing

Flexible Deployment

Most Expensive

PCIe Cards Must Be Half Height

N5

MATX and ITX SUPPORT

Largest Storage Capacity @ 12 BAY

UNPARALLELLED PCIE SUPPORT

Tonnes of Cooling/airflow potential

MASSIVE…JUST MASSIVE

Most Expensive of the bunch

N6

Best for  a Power NAS Build + Bigger CPU Cooling

Largest Storage Capacity + Full Size PCIe Cards

Best Prosumer Deployment

PROPER HDD TRAYS!

BIG Size and oddly tall

Noisiest System of the Three

======= Where To Buy? =======    
$76 (Check Aliexpress HERE) $99.42 (Check Aliexpress HERE) $76.99 (Check Aliexpress HERE) $148.99 (Check Aliexpress HERE) (Check Aliexpress HERE)
$149 (Check Amazon HERE) $170 (Check Amazon HERE) $199* (Check Amazon HERE)

 

$249 (Check Amazon HERE) (Check Amazon HERE)

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      807 thoughts on “Jonsbo N6 NAS Case Released

      1. I’m interested in comments from other N2 builders – what did you do with the rear case fan and connection?
        I found the connection on the SATA back plane spun the fan up to 100% creating a lot of noise, even with a Noctua 12×15. I ended up threading it through to the mobo sys fan header which brought the noise down considerably.
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      2. “if you lose this allen key, getting in there will be an effing nightmare!!!” – a bit dramatic, eh? I’d think most people building computers have some sort of handy tool kit. This isn’t some esoteric bespoke tool. It’s an allen key. 🙂
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      3. 120mm aio would solve that issue with a small height on the pump block
        You can buy better chassis’s for the hdd’s to not use that rubber gromet btw.
        You can also buy a seperate bracket piece for easy install and un-install of the 2 hdd slots.
        and also, who is putting a beefy cpu in a case that cannot fit a modern gpu?

        The cooling would be just fine using a thermalright axp90-x36 and a 8700g or a 9600x with 0 issue.
        I know this video is over a year old at this point.
        I just feel like the review is saying some (very little) good about a case that actually is decently well made. and can indeed fit a m-atx motherboard into it.
        The case is meant for a storage pc case (NAS) Not for gaming or general productivity.

        I think (Personal opinion) that this is a load of crap, unnecesary complaint about stuff you wouldnt even need to consider when its made as a igpu case running just storage.
        I might just be in the wrong. but the topic of this review just seems unreasonable for what the case is built for.
        Almost like complaining about a mini itx case not fitting a e-atx motherboard

        I watched the review, I bought the case. And I built in it with a 8700g and the small axp90 cooler. 152 tb of total storage, I’ve used it now for 5 months. and I’ve had 0 issues with it, not cooling, not dead hdds or ssds. been all good and it’s gonna continue like so 🙂
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      4. Thank you so much for the video. Your video made me purchase this case and yes these tray solutions are the best. And worst part is I misplaced them, now I cannot find them anywhere in any online store. Do you have any suggestions or idea where I could get more of these rubber grommets and pull straps?
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      5. I’ve been wanting one of these and I just can’t buy it yet. I would much prefer a six bay 3.5″ hdds with 3 on each side, then give me a tad more height on top.

        My eternal search for that smaller m-atx case
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      6. Great vid! Tbh im just looking for a decent horizontal mount case and this is well decent.
        Dont spose theres any decent alternatives as i dont have any use for the nas part 😛
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      7. I think people don´t understand that this case is perfect for reusing older motherboards and cpu´s to build smaller nases. In my case an old Dell Optiplex 790 with an Intel i5 2400 about 9 years old but perfectly useable as an small footprint nas. The way windows are making us all scrap our “old” pc´s to install windows 11 are a prefect way for us to reuse older hardware in this nas-case. And the size is still pretty small with a decent amount of storage. Jonsbo N5 is more for the purposes you stated in this video I think.
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      8. Thank you for this video. Very funny intro. I laugh when you show us all the route and wait to arrive from AliExpress but then I was startled when you threw the package at the door and over the desk … That must has been a muck up box …
        I don’t understand why delivery to the UK has to go through the USA … My AliExpress deliveries to the UK come directly or if slow, they come by cargo train via Khazastan – Belarus – Poland – Germany
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      9. This really is a great video! Very detailed for how to build a NAS. Unfortunately the cost of the case and the MOBO has risen to the point now that it is no longer a feasible alternative for me to build a NAS. I can buy a UGREEN 2 bay NAS cheaper than what all the parts needed to build the fully operational unit. Possibly the price points of the individual components will fall in price and make it feasible again. CWWK’s MOBO appears to be declining in price which would be an option. Thanks for this instructional video!
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      10. I’d love to see an updated version of this, I’m considering the 4800 plus or DIY… it’ll no doubt drop again to 479 on the green, it seems to every other month lol, so prime day ‘deal’ is budget at 479, can we do better DIY??
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      11. I bought the NAS case for a customer a few weeks ago.

        Visually, it’s great and looks high quality at first glance.
        However, in terms of technology and accessibility during assembly, Jonsbo doesn’t seem to have put much thought into it, and access to the vertical hard disks is also limited. You cannot use 2.5-inch hard disks without buying your own adapters.
        Most people have 2.5-inch SSDs these days.
        Additionally, the rubber bands, which also serve as the rail guide for inserting the hard disks, do not fit properly with either the SATA connector at the back or the rail itself, due to the rubber causing significant resistance.

        I wouldn’t buy it again at this price. The HDD/SSD holder is the main issue — it’s okay for private use, but not for commercial purposes.

        I am aware that you would normally use rack hardware.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      12. Long time lurker, but huge fan of your content gents. The reviews of the N4 cover that you need an SFX power supply, but I notice from the photos on the site that with the SFX supply in place, there looks like there is shed loads of room. Can a full ATX supply not manage to squeeze in there?
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      13. I am not sure if I overheard it, but does the Backplane use staggered spinup of the drives or do all the drives spinup simultaneous on start? That really makes a difference in choosing a PSU.
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      14. anyone who thinks a 12-day Nas is overkill is simply not doing data storage the right way even if you’re not a certifiable data hoarder there is no such thing as too much storage it may just take you longer to fill up 12 drives but there’s no such thing as too much storage
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      15. Too big to have next to the TV! Off the shelf 4-6 Bay NAS are so expensive given the hardware included and always equipped with noisy fans. DIY is the way to go but nobody seems to make the perfect case for mIDX. Case suppliers should skip on the fans or supply with low noise ones. Xpenology (DSM) is now installable in easy way now.
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      16. waiting for a mATX motherboard + 10x HDDs + ATX PSU revision
        this is what people want, not sure why all these dumb casing companies intentionally not make them for fk reasons
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      17. this was dumb
        why not just do that 8x HDDs layour ?
        nobody care about 2.5″ anymore
        10 years ago people call those SATA SSD the future, now its DEAD while 3.5″ gets higher demand
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      18. No space for air to flow between the drives, those drives will be cooking. They would been better of making it 7 drive. Or can you keep them cool replacing the fans on it?
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      19. CWWK 12th Gen i3-N305 N355 N100 N150 2*Intel i226-V 2.5G NAS Motherboard 6*SATA3.0 6-Bay Soft Rout 1*DDR5 4800MHz Firewall ITX Mainboard…. where can i get the manual to view the front panel connections?
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      20. Hex screws are vastly superior to normal screws when it comes to longevity. The thing you don’t like is actually meant to be that way so you can take them off over and over again.
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      21. Boring case, it does not fit my dual Xeon EVGA SR2….
        ventilation should be front and back, not at the sides thats just stupid.
        Not to mention the fan grills are just terrible.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      22. Topton has no quality whatsoever, I bought it from Aliexpress and threw my money away, they didn’t accept the return of the product or give me my money back and there’s no repair. Friendly advice, don’t buy this crap.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      23. Hey great review and I don’t think you were being negative just critical. I’m getting this case in the mail today and have a corsair sf600 sfx power supply. Should I put the psu with the fan facing up then? I had no idea this case had no vent on the bottom!
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      24. Another swing and a miss from Jonsbo. No sound insulation, garbage slide rail system, terrible hex screws etc. For those wanting an actually good NAS case, pickup the Antec P101 Silent Black ATX Case. 10x the quality at half the price. You’re welcome.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      25. Any advice for a video card I can get for the N4 to fix under that ceiling to quickly transcode video pulls? I was looking at a Quatro since the price of the low profile A380’s are crazy.
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      26. really hope the n6 will be this like bottom full drives top matx at least cuz cmon itx is just so limited and annoying and better cooling which makes the psu plcement the only big issue
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      27. This case works great for me. I would wager that for the majority of users who are building a home server, the N4 offers more than enough in terms of configuration options. If a “Power” user needs more in terms of drives or cooling than maybe look at a 4u rack chassis or a full tower. I am a big fan of the Fractal design 804 but the N4, except for the cooler height limitation, is just as capable with arguably better aesthetics..
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      28. BE CAREFUL WITH TOPTON PRODUCTS, TOPTON COMPUTER, TOPTON LAPTOP, TOPTON MINI-PC, TOPTON NOTEBOOK, THEY ARE POOR QUALITY PRODUCTS AND THERE IS NO TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE OR TECHNICAL SUPPORT AND ALIEXPRESS IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANYTHING.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      29. I wonder how well the fan on that CPU cooler will work given the fact it’s right up to the top of the case which has no ventilation holes? Having said that: I would go for the N3 myself.
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      30. No dustfilter? That is a no no to not have a filter for a system running 24/7
        The PSU solution was a very odd thing to.

        This would no get into my build

        Thanks for a great review
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      31. you’re slightly wrong, we don’t want to use big (economical?) hard drives for storage. We are all going to SSD which is almost always 2.5″ (except it’s an NVMe of course) – I’d rather say 3.5″ spinning rust is nearing its end.
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      32. Ehh. I don’t like the fact there is such a huge jump from the N4 to the N5 in drive bays. I don’t need 12, but I could use 8 drives bays. The N4 has only 6. And the next step down with the N3 only supports mini-ATX boards. I have a Mini ATX as I need 2 PCIe slots for the NBA and 10gig Ethernet.I mean sure this is a good case but my use case is something that is portable. The N4 could fit the bill if the other 2 slots were 3.5″ bays as there are plenty of adapters out there that will convert 3.5 to a 2.5″ SSD setup.
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      33. Does anyone other then me think it would be possible to rig some type of HD holder with a real handle using a 3d printer? Would be really interested to hear if it might be possible. I dont have the new case yet.
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      34. I’m Canadian, so I used a shipping receiving company in USA to receive the box for me for $5 and drove across the border to pick it up – to avoid insane shipping fees. This case is 100% overkill for me, but that’s ok.

        This will be my first NAS build ever, and only second build ever (my other one was a PC). I will be starting off with:
        – Intel Core i5-13600K
        – GIGABYTE Z790 AORUS Elite X WIFI7
        – TeamGroup T-FORCE DELTA RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 6000MHz CL30 UDIMM (didn’t want RGB, but it was the best deal at the moment for a CL30 DDR5 ram)
        – WD Black SN750 NVMe 1TB PCIe 3.0 (Cache)
        – WD Black SN750 NVMe 512GB PCIe 3.0 (more cache? I don’t really know what to use this for, but I already have it)
        (regarding the SSDs, I am pulling them from my PC, and upgrading my PC ones – so they are a little underwhelming for this build, but good enough for now)
        – Storage: 4x Seagate Ironwolf Pro (Enterprise) 16TB (for now)
        – PSU: Corsair RM850x Gold (overkill, but got it for decent price)
        – Case: Jonesbo N5 (duh!)
        – CPU Cooler: Cooler Master Hyper 212 Black Edition
        – Case fans: Noctua NF-A15 HS-PWM chromax.black and SAMA BL 3 in 1 ARGB fan kit (had these fans laying around)
        – USB Boot drive: Anker 2-in-1 USB 3.0 Portable Card Reader with SanDisk 32GB Ultra microSDHC UHS-I Memory Card (planning to run unRAID, and the GUI is assigned to the card reader, so I can remove the microsd and make copies of it)
        – External Hard drives for additional backup for sensitive files: – 2x 14TB Seagate Expansion STKP1400400 and 2x 8TB WD External HDD (some will be offsite ideally)
        – I’m going to try to do this workaround I saw online where backblaze personal can be used to backup the NAS, instead of the more expensive B2.

        I wanted ECC, but mobos and ram were too expensive and I won’t be using ZFS files, so I hope/think regular memory is ok – considering unRAID works off parity instead of data stripping.

        Any feedback is appreciated 🙂
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      35. I initially saw this review and figured it would be too big for my needs, but as I do more research on enclosures I’m quickly realizing that they all make compromises in the weirdest spots, so I’m quickly circling around back to this one because while yes, it is a bit large and I don’t need quite this many drives, it also doesn’t compromise in any of the areas I actually care about.

        Now to see if I can actually get hold of one.
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      36. I think they should have but the psu in the bottom sideways and maby use an extended power plug to reroute the 110V / 230V connection to the back again. This would have freed up enough space at the bottom to have 8 3.5″ bays.
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      37. Okay. Now I want them to come out with a Jonsbo 4.5 NAS Case lol. The 4 not quite big enough and the 5 is too big lol. If the 4 had 6 easy remove hard drive back plane it would be perfect for me.
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      38. I bought a Topton computer on Aliexpress and I was so angry with myself, it was a poor quality product, without technical support, it was money thrown away. If you want some advice from a friend, look for another brand.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      39. Loved your vid, TrueNAS is a bit sketchy to first setup but does it job after a while of tinkering. The 6 port sata controller based on the ASMedia 1166 chipset is the way to go? Works great with TN instead of the JMB585… Don’t cheap out on that one. I used a PCI x4 card, neater and cleaner with cables. And btw, for the money and quality of parts stop using the Ali bords and just buy an Asus N100 or something… Good bios, great hardware and you can support local or national companies
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      40. tl;dr: get an 8bay server. With lights-out management, more ports and options than you can shake a stick at, redundent power supplies, sensor information and then some, drive bays made to not irritate each other with vibrations, an air flow concept validated to support a full load of drives, a backplane with ventilations slots, the list goes on. For your stuff at home, if a microserver with 4x20TB won’t do you need to look for enterprise solutions.
        Thorough review, though.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      41. Could I use SAS drives in this enclosure by using an adapter and moving the backplane back 10 mm so I could get the front back on. I would be using a SAS pci card with a mini sas adapter.
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      42. Bought this case from AliExpress for $85 w/ free shipping about 4-6 weeks ago to build my Homelab server/NAS/cluster in & I’m feeling a little 50/50 on it. Maybe it is just because I’m still waiting on shipping, maybe it is because Unifi just dropped their dedicated solution. Maybe also my mind will change when I get it in-hand & actually get stuck in on the project, who knows?
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      43. I wonder how are you going to plug 8 nvme drives with that expansion card, if pcie bifurcation can be set up as 4+4+4+4 as a max? I’m curious because I’m planning to use 4xnvme in a BIOS RAID0 as a cache drive for my NAS, and that can be made with Aorus B550 mITX motherboard.
        PS Unless that’s a PCIex4-to-8xSATA expansion card for SATA M.2 drives…
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      44. What *Mobo was used in that? It had great io on it ????

        Edit oh its a hero so hi end and full size so IO isn’t that surprising lol. Great content as usual, not sure id ever look anywhere else for NAS stuff you guys do it best! ❤️
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      45. 6:20 You have seen nothing. I once received a server power cable packed in a box which was larger then the case box on your desk. Bit shorter but much wider. It was also packed in all kinds of bubble wrap. A fricking standard power cable! ????
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      46. Just discovered the channel, it’s great!
        Newbie question: could a case like this be a NAS AND a good gaming rig (like RTXX 4090 good)? If yes, would you make a video on it (specs for the build, configuration etc…)?
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      47. Oh boi … last year the N3 … now I am planing for the N5!
        Those extra 4 bays will come so in handy for SSD storage – the extra space will come so in handy for extra M2 NVMe cards and PCIe to M2 cards!

        Really thrilled about this 🙂
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      48. Loving my N2 case. Upgraded my non-NAS case to one of those recently and it was pretty easy to work in. I changed nothing about my system config but at least now I can add new HDDs in the future. It’s already pretty substantial and I can’t imagine how much heavier this case is.
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      49. I tried an N3, and it had absolutely massive resonance, that made hard drives normally audible from 3 feet away audible from outside the room, 7 feet away, instead. I ended up returning it.
        I wonder how much *this* one will resonate?
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      50. Perfect case, literally checks every box for me. EXCEPT when I discovered its only 6x 3.5in drives + 2x 2.5 drives. What a fucking re***ded design, just give me 8x 3.5 bays. Excuse my french. The next choice for me would be the N3. The problem is I aleady have a CPU and ATX mobo. If I go N3 I need a new mobo. How annoying.
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      51. Bro! I need some NAS help and I do know who else to ask! I made a DIY NAS with drives but only using 2 atm. A 350W flex atx psu but the drives are not spinning up! Do I need more wattage?
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      52. Hmm its kinda too high (my max is 33cm), i dont need alot of cooling and stuff. I hoped it would be less taller.. so i think i will go with the n3 and 2 92mm noctua fans for the hdds
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      53. Is this finally available?
        Got a sick build in mind since it can handle eatx board’s and well i got me a banger of a board and CPU ram. Though oddly no USB internal header for fan controllers.

        Nvm can’t justify the human trafficking cost of shipping ☠️

        Case $556 Cad + $192 shipping. Guess I’ll wait till one hits eBay or Ncase has some in the western world.
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      54. It’s quite amusing how ZimaCube apparently took “inspiration” from the Jonsbo N5 NAS case. The front panel resembles a doppelgänger, and don’t even get me started on the identical IO port placements and ventilation design. It’s like they ran out of creativity and decided to photocopy the blueprints. Mechanical layout? Practically a mirror image. If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, Jonsbo should feel immensely complimented.
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      55. Love this intro, music reminds me of Charlie Chaplin, which was actually quite appropriate!

        That case is HUGE! The only other case I can think of with that layout is Thermaltake’s Core X9. With the size and weight of graphics cards these days, I’m surprised there aren’t more cases with a horizontal motherboard tray.
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      56. Amazing doucheFace thumbnail! Congrats you look like every unimaginative, lazy creator on YT. Clearly intelligent people choose stupid face thumbnails because looking like an idiot is a huge indicator that your content must be amazing! ????
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      57. OK so… case is amazing, BUT two things:

        1. it’s a couple of cm too tall and wide to fit in a Kallax and that’s the greatest shame ever. Width could be solved by not installing one of the vertical separator, but height? that’s an hard one. It’s twice of a shame because the top half is way to big and could easily be an inch shorter!

        2. that 8 disk backplate looks amazing and I REALLY REALLY REALLY wish they would sell it standalone because it would be amazing for custom cases! I’m dabbling in 3d printing cases and finding decent backplate with good drive separation and with a low profile/holes to allow for a good workflow is next to impossible to a level where I’m contemplating sudying electronics to make one.
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      58. Jonsbo try so hard to make perfect NAS case and always fail on the simple things. My main problem is with the backplanes. Why can’t they use a SFF format connector instead of the basic SATA. It could make the build much more cleaner, to use 3 SFF cables instead of 12 SATA cables. Also, why they have to combine so many MOLEX and SATA power connectors? Molex is dead, use just SATA. Three SATA connectors would be fine (two for the main 8 port backplane and one for 4 port backplane) instead of five. And the last major problem with the backplanes are their lack of perforation. The main 8 port part don’t have any. There is only about 1cm space on top of the drive bay which I doubt will be enough to cool (especially in the summer) if you have this case just laying in the house and not in cooled server room. The 4 port backplane have some perforation but it almost don’t have any access to the airflow because of the power supply right behind it. And I also don’t like the rubber used for the drive sleds. Rubber will disintegrate over time and become useless to pull the drives out of cage. But I understand that they used it to make the case cheaper.
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      59. You always do a nice job on physical hardware reviews, but you almost always leave out one very critical piece of information: HDD operating temperatures. The design of this Jonsbo case does not come close to providing adequate “push or pull” airflow over ALL 12 dirve bays. It would be extremely helpful to know the HDD temps. Yes, it requires more effort, but it would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
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      60. If you try to look at the case as it self not bad, but if you try to put it in the world and compere what’s out there at this size and form factor its most efficient if you buy a rack-able case instead of putting this somewhere if you need a NAS this size you probably have networking and maybe a server or two then at that point you need a rack solution albeit small but none the less a rack solution.
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      61. The case is almost ideal for a small general purpose server. I’d be tempted to use a second hand Supermicro mobo with lots of PCIe connectivity, Epyc or Xeon processor.

        SAS backplanes, as mentioned by others, along with SFF connectors. I’ve invested in a bunch of SAS HDDs.

        It *might* be possible to replace the SATA backplanes assuming Jonsbo use the roughly standard 80mm spacing. I don’t mind a bit of a bodge fit, metal part fabrication, 3d printed brackets.
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      62. Damn I really like this case, but the cooling for the HDD being just a single fan far away from the HDD’s.. I really like Jonsbo they tend to make simple but well made cases.
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      63. Yes! Or so I thought…
        I’ve been waiting for this case for the better part of half a year, once the rumors came out.
        It was so long in fact, that i decided to just repurpose my old pc case from 12 years ago and put a 5.25″ to 3.5″ cage/adapter into it for 15$. Now i get 12 HDD capacity for next to nothing.
        I thought it would be temporary, but seeing the price of N5 kills it for me, sorry.Yes, i get it, shipping 7.5KG is no joke, but not for x2 the price.

        It’s a kickass case, and everything i hoped it would be, but I’ll keep using my practically free bubba build for now.

        (Wrote this prior to even starting to watch the video, and it seems i guessed everything right, hehe)
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      64. LOL, I actually prefer hex screws over philips for the exact opposite reason you mention xD

        For me, Philips always easily round over, especially if over tightened and the hex socket screws are far less of a trouble. Sounds like you might need a solid allen key set that properly fits the screw head and your rounding issues should be far less common.
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      65. long time subscriber here. Can you please please please fix your audio? It’s so muffled and I like to run your videos in play=all mode, but its driving me crazy lol
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      66. Still looking for a decent 12 bay case with a similar drive layout as a SYN DS2422 or TERRAMASTER T12.. but with dual PSU, ZFS, decent CPU, NVME and 10Gb. A tall order, but maybe 2025 will finally be the year of the 0.25 Petabyte project.
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      67. I just don’t get it. Fractal Design Define 7XL with terrific design, build flexibility, industrially silenced case, 18 drives bays + 5 SSDs, any MB, any cooling system, any discrete GPU… Here for ages for 250 USD… And it has USB-C on its front panel 🙂
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      68. I ended up running the 3 fans to the mobo with extensions and low noise adaptors. Everything is still cool, but now basically silent. Cause I couldnt believe how loud it was with them plugged into the backplane.
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      69. First, love the way you showed how the case travelled and some outdoor scene. May I know what are the temperature of the disks in the 4 bays cage, compare to the 8 bays? As there are no fans directly behind the 4 bays cage. TQ
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      70. I love that they don’t use trays and the drives just easily slide in to their slots. Less cost on developing the trays; simple is underrated tbh. Also, idgaf about numbering… Do you cable the drives to the mobo according to the numbers on the case? If the numbering is off, do you go back and shift the back end cabling to adjust for the offset? I don’t fuggin change that sheit. If a drive fails you’ll know it and hear it. If you can’t immediately locate it, takes 2 mins to find it. Most times you know which drive it’s gonna be…
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      71. 9:43 Wait, are larger HDD drives really noisier? Wow, okay. Why isn’t that bit of wisdom more widely known? I might have to rethink my set up since I have to keep my home server inside my room.
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      72. No idea if this would work.

        Remove the four drive backplane. Would a 4-6-8 etc ICYDock type enclousure for SSDs fit in that space? As there are already cables all over the place. A few more would not hurt. SSDs connection to an HBA with SAS SFF-8643 or SFF-8639 connectors to keep the cables in check upstairs.
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      73. I believe that this case has too many air vents. The air flow will be chaotic. As the air can be drawn in from anywhere. Covering the top and side vents of the mobo part may help thermals and noise. looking at the HDD lower part. As the vents are at the sides, near the fans. I presume that most of the air will be drawn in via these vents, and out via the fans. If so, this bypasses most the HDDs cooling. It also looks like only the risen heat from the HDDs will be removed. Once the heat rises above the solid backplane. So there is little direct flow of air across the drives, front to back.

        Talk about Spagetti Junction with the cabling situation.
        The backplanes are likely just reused from previous 4 and 8 bay cases. Which is why there are two separate backplanes with incorrect numbering.
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      74. How loud is this compared to a rack-mounted ‘NAS case’ or rack server with 12 or 16 HDD bays? I’ve been steering away from rack-mounted homelab specifically because of noise, but if noise will be a factor anyway even in (slightly) more traditional home-friendly chasses, maybe there’s no point to avoiding getting a rack.
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      75. All I know is we are into October and still no news from synology on anything… if we don’t get a notice by Nov 1st I guarantee there won’t be any releaes this year. They wouldn’t miss black friday for a new release.
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      76. Totally disagree with hex screw opinion. Hex screw heads are superior to phillipshead in every way. If Jonsbo had used Phillipsheadscrews, these would have been much bigger. But size and head forms are two different topics.
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      77. This is way deeper than it needs to be, they could have orientated the PSU so the back of the PSU faced one of the sides, they could have reduced depth, given more flexibility, and still support E-ATX/EBB.
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      78. Can’t wait to see a build example with a regular ATX mobo with more expansion possibilities. The case is looking nice, but man it sounds cheap. It desperately need some case coating to damping that thin metal without ruining the airflow. I could definetly see a reason for people that don’t plan on going higher than 8 HDD’s to start with to just remove the 4bay slot and use the space for hiding cables.
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      79. While I’ve been enjoying the Jonsbo case content i feel the need to address the handles. those mounts are specifically meant for mechanical drives, as you are using in the video here, to absorb the vibration of the drive. This isn’t a new idea though Jonsbo is the first I’ve seen approach it in this manner. My current “enthusiast” case is a Lanboy Air in which Antec tried to absorb that vibration using a a rubberized suspension system. The case is old and all of my rubber suspenders have failed years ago, which is my only concern here with Jonsbo. What will this solution perform and handle like once the rubber has gotten stiff and brittle? How much vibration will they contain at that point if any?
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      80. I’m a NAS n00b but satisfied I went with a different case instead of waiting for Jonabo to start shipping the N5.

        Ended up building with a Thermaltake Core V21: m ATX mobo, ATX PSU, full height tower cooler, room for full size GPUs, 3 x 3.5”, 3 x 2.5” drives, room for seven 140mm fans. Still fussing with software but it should serve my needs for a few years.
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      81. My first take on this is the drive configuration 3 rows of 4 drives would I thought been a cleaner design and the rubber handles mmmm ,what is the chances they are going to deteriorate and snap over time?
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      82. Haha loved the intro to this. Good balanced review! I ended up using ironwolf pro drives in mine and noticed I did not need any of the fans so just have them disabled. The N100 board I’m using, while comically small, also sips power and doesn’t require much cooling. So overall surprisingly quiet, just a little hum. The perfect NAS for me…and really almost anyone. So much flexibility! It’s just a chonky boy though and hard to fit in entertainment centers and other common places for a NAS.
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      83. Awesome review, glad I’ve waited for it before making a decision to build my first nas system. Almost all “negatives” points about the case don’t bother me at all, however the only two point that concern me are noise and powerefficiency (hence why I’m using my noctua fans). I’m planning to upgrade it over the years into a gaming nas with a dedicated gpu, 10gbit network — but also for data hoarding and my family cloud solution.

        Would you recommend using this particular case for this usecase or is that just absolute overkill? Also how does it compare to the fractal design 804?

        Thank you again for that great in depth view!
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      84. 10:40 All of those slots in the side of this case for what is a primarily front-to-back cooling design** will reduce the static pressure and airflow performance of all the rear fans, consequently this will also serve to increase the percieved airflow noise because air is being sucked in through the sides instead of only through the front.

        **I do understand that the PSU area has slots in the side for air supply for ATX PSU’s with their large itegral fan, but the rest of the case does not need slots in the sides.

        An interesting noise and cooling performance test would be blocking/covering those side slots and recording the differences in temp and dB.
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      85. Took them 5 times to finally get……most things right, but as you mentioned, oh how they love about their terrible tray design, and support 12 trays but only using SATA ports with that poor backboard, really Jonsbo, it would kill you to build a better tray and using some SFF-8643 and SFF-8639 ports?
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      86. Waiting for this and one minute after release I knew I wouldn’t be first ????
        You should have shaved at the beginning of that first bit and ended that with the beard grown back. Clearly a small sacrifice for the Art ????
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      87. The *MASSIVE* Jonsbo N5 Review is NOW LIVE. Watch the video here – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVkZk9Impnk or read the written Review/Guide – https://nascompares.com/2024/10/04/jonsbo-n5-review/ on NASCompares #jobsno #diynas #datastorage #byo #diy
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      88. So you get the unraid license for free? So your nas cost hundred bucks more. And it is an Motherboard and a io shield.

        And proxmox is a hypervisor and has absolutely nothing to do with network attached storage.
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      89. It’s clearly not geared towards “beefy cpu”, but MATX mobo gives you more slots and stuff to play with. Even then, something like 8500G only draws 40 wats yet can be called “beefy CPU” for a NAS. It’s Okay.
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      90. the problem is that manufacturer don’t do low profile gpu anymore, not even short lenght itx, because it’s costly, so to reduce costs, computers are turning bigger and bigger. technology improvements? who cares! this is just about profit!
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      91. 11:00 What i want is a wider N3, call it an N5, and rather than built in bays(or maybe an optional variant without drive bays), it just has 6×5.25 bays so you can install your own drive cages.
        Want 10×3.5 drives? Get a pair of those silverstone drive enclosure 3×5.25 into 5×3.5 No tools whatsoever to use those, just pop the drive in and out no screws, no trays no rubber bumpers. Want a mix of SATA bulk storage and SATA SSDs? Get one of those silverstone enclosures, then one of those 16 bay ICYDOCK enclosures, and the last 5.25 bay could be for an actual optical drive.
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      92. Considering it’s only 5mm..say maybe 7mm taking into account metal thickness, difference in the case size versus ATX mb you should see if it’s possible to shoehorn one on there. Yeah you’d have to use half height cards but all 4 rear slots should work(I bet most boards could be carefully shaved along the edges to take out the extra size for the N4 nas case
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      93. Thank you. I’d love to see the next steps: actually connecting the box to the internet and your in-house network and configuring the system to function as intended. Good job!
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      94. I think the thing you’re missing is the cost. Firstly the fact that mATX motherboards are usually cheaper than mITX because the latter has less space and expansion. Also the N4 is, at least at the retailer I’m looking at, by far the cheapest of these Jonsbo NAS cases. It’s even cheaper than the Node 304/804 which don’t have any backplane

        Speaking for myself, my NAS is a i5-4590 in a 10 year old mATX motherboard with 2x 10TB HDDs (new-ish) and 2x 2TB HDDs. Mostly repurposing old hardware. I’ll almost surely upgrade it fairly soon but when I do it’ll be to the Ryzen 5 3600X that’s my current daily driver which also has an mATX board. This N4 case? Seems perfect for my needs. None of their other cases really meet my requirements as well as this one does. And is certainly a decent upgrade from what can be best be described as the curbside case I’m currently using which is ugly, loud and has poor HDD ventilation
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      95. Anyone who’s building PC’s should already have a toolkit with allen key bits, surely. Getting hung up on one of those seems a little over the top. Either way, nice case, seems like an iron plated pain in the posterior to get one after a quick look around. A Supermicro Mini-ITX mobo with an Atom processor on would be a great combo with this, some come with 12 SATA ports. My main concern about this case are all those small and thus noisy fans. I’d have liked to see a big-ass 20 cm fan on the rear or something to suck air through the whole thing.
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      96. Marketing this as a NAS case is a mistake. This is a desktop lab case. If you want more than 6 drives in a NAS, one should be using a rack-mounted solution anyway with 4-6 fans. I already have a 16 drive 3U rackable and ordered one of these to move docker off the other system. I’d have been happy with only 4 total swapable bays (2×2) and a lower profile case.
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      97. Helpful hints:
        1) first boot the motherboard outside of the case. If it is dead you don’t want to be wasting time installing it and routing cables
        2) never use a cheap USB drive. Use a Samsung Fit or Bar USB Drive. You can do a search for the guy who tested them out and they beat out the rest. I am not sure but I think you can clone the USB. If so get two so when the first one dies you are not scambling looking for configurations.
        3) update the BIOS. If the board dies it can be RMA’ed.
        4) Use the Preclear tool in Unraid on the hard drives before using them. Side note, if you want a really nice NAS case SuperMirco offers a 4 bay one. It is not cheap but it will last and also keep your drives cool. best of luck.
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      98. why are my replies being deleted, i try telling a guy that was asking me what to do and my comments are gone after a few seconds, what gives?
        shit antibot reply filters, I can’t even tell the guy to email me instead, what a joke
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      99. back when i build my nas , i buy a full atx lga 1150 with 2pcie 16x 2pci 6 drives 4dim , for 70eu , and got a celeron for 40 that i later upgrade with i5 , got a 10gb nic , and still got a free pcie for gpu or extra storage , and house everthing in old style case that had 8 drive slot , and 4dvd slots , yes is bit bigger and you may need more time to swap a drive , but is much more powerful and upgradable ,
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      100. The fan runs at full speed, sound like a helicopter up side is hd is very chilled even if they are stacked next to each other. The 4 alan key screws can be replaced with the 4 Countersunk computer screws. This case is really big even for a mini itx.
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      101. So a N5 with :
        12 hdd 3.5” and 3 120mm fan at the bottom, full backplane
        A top space for full ATX motherboord and full length pcie card and itx power supply.
        When ?
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      102. I got the information from the truenas scale community to avoid these sata extender however they gonna look like (pcie, m2, etc) because the chips on them aren’t that stable overall. Also the chip which comes with the motherboard. Therefore there recommendation is to buy a isa 9300 hba card and use the pcie slot for it.
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      103. Something is not clear for me for the wiring of the internal HDDs board. There are 2 connectors, one Molex and one SATA Power. Should I connect both of them? Only one?
        There is no mention of this part in the instruction manual. In addition I can say that in my build (did yesterday) I used only the Molex and the rear FAN is not working.
        Please somebody had experience with this?
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      104. so basically wait for the N5 (or whatever they plan to call it)that is an improvement on the N3 to be wider to allow for more pcie slots, bigger motherboards ???? this is the only thing holding me back from buying for now. Will stick to my current nas for now until there is something more interesting to perk my interest.
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      105. those trays are god damn awful.

        the psu vents, there is the vents above, so it’s not like there is none. so not sure that was a big issue.

        Couldn’t you have just set it up then run a temp test to be conclusive? to at least make your point valid about heating issues.

        Though your argument about beefy heatsink not fitting is valid, but is there any cpu heatsinks that would fit in this type of case? why not mention and test for that to see the temp results? that would be worth exploring wouldn’t it?
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      106. It’s really crazy how budget you can go! ATM I’m looking at a total budget of 200usd for a NAS with 16TBs of storage in a raid 6 config no idea how I did it but it’s an amazing thing crazy utility.
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      107. They botched the N4 hard. So much opportunity to make it great and they make it worse than the N3. What we need is an N5 with 10X hotswaps, room for a proper ATX, and full PCIe slots.
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      108. NVMe SSD in NAS with even 10GbE it’s wasted potential, single drive capabel to read/write even 6000MB/s is limited to 1000MB/s and they works in raid xD. I have DS220+ and I replace two 4TB ironwolf with 2TB sata ssd for system and VM, and for quieter operations and 12TB Toshiba HDD for storage, two replaced ironwolfs are for backup
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      109. you deserve a like and sub
        give this man a like
        ????????????????????????????????????????????
        it’s rare to find legend people nowadays
        Thanks man that was super helpful

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      110. I still like 2.5″ drives. Primary reason, so I can use the NVMe slot for expansion and boot off the 2.5″ SSD if needed. 2.5″ are still SATA too, so no need for a bunch on PCIe lanes. I agree with the rubber straps though, those are annoying.
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      111. There’s a lot of people complaining a lot about this case, forgetting that not everyone *needs* 8 hot swappable drives and full height/length PCI-E cards. I just did a build in one of these, and it’s perfect for my needs. I’ve gone with a mid-range CPU (Ryzen 5 5600G), 4 drives, and a couple of 2.5Gbe NICs. It’s been happily running my Proxmox VMs and TrueNAS for weeks. If they made something as big as the N3, it wouldn’t fit in the space where I have the N4.

        Jonsbo probably can and should update the N3 in the same style for those who do need the extra power and storage. I think the N2 and N3 look a little cheap personally, but there’s room for them to make options for everyone here. I am really impressed with the quality overall. I do kind of agree with your comments on drive mounting, but swapping drives is a very rare occurrence for me, so I’m okay with it.

        I will add that I have two very minor complaints about the N4:
        – The stock 120mm fan is a little louder than I’d like – not uncomfortably loud, but I probably will replace it in the future.
        – The PSU placement is pretty bad. This is my first build with a SFX PSU, and I was caught out by the short 24-pin ATX connector. I had to buy an extension for it to reach. Something to be aware of for anyone doing a build with the N4.
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      112. Hate to disagree because your reviews are great, but the N3 has a lots of issue you dismissed. first these 2 x 100mm stupid that you you have to replace (noisy and bad) adds to the price, also its is a big fat case. I agree on the pros but these cons are what make the N2 a great deal (cheaper, smaller) so unless you really need to put a gpu or need 8 drives, I would go with the n2. the n4 is just a dumb idea
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      113. I still don’t get why you want to put a nice piece of WOOD on a NAS, whilst you use RUBBER bands to pull out the HDD’s…
        I’d prefer the money invested in wood, to have real HDD bays with buttons!
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      114. Hopefully they fix everything on the N4 and launch it as a N5.
        6x 3.5″ + 2x 2.5″ + possibly 2x M.2 on the board, mATX, ATX PSU, full height PCIe, all sata drives hot swappable on a back plate… probably the competition already has something like that surely.
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      115. How about Kotumy (seems present also with different names) 6 or 8 bay cases? They have proper hdd caddies, they can fit mATX mobo with 4 full slot PCIe. Looks like it ticks all the boxes. I’d welcome review of this case. Look is not the best but maybe repaint will help.
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      116. I’ve already ordered my N4 because I’m repurposing my matx gaming hardware as i upgrade away from it. I’m using a Thermalright AXP90-X53 with a Silverstone 180mm Penetrator instead of the coolers own fan probably mounted diagonal with rubber fan mounts.(going to be snug) grabbed a PSU from wolfgang’s database of good idle PSU’s, my intention is to use the gaming matx boards pcie to add a few nvme for read/write caching, I’m also eyeballing the intel a380 low profile, but honestly, I’m not sure i even want to fall down the transcoding rabbit hole
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      117. I bought the N2, mainly for the compact footprint and, because I have a lot of 2.5″ SSDs, I’m in the middle of swapping out the 5 disk backplane for a IBM 69Y0650 8×2.5-inch backplane, just spending a bit of time building a custom power cable for the new backplane as it uses a 16 pin to 14 pin cable. The width is identical to the 5×3.5″ board, so it’ll fit without any serious case modding and I can print a guide for inserting SATA SSDs. It uses a pair of SFF-8087 connectors, so I’ll probably grab a IT mode HBA card.

        Using SSDs also lets me bring the backplane forward to create more space at the black for a bigger fan and better cable management.

        Well, that’s the plan anyway.
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      118. Regarding Chapters! YouTube is not indexing the chapters for this video correctly. You can find the correct chapters linked in the description, or the time stamps below:
        00:00 – The Start
        00:18 – Why Jonsbo?
        01:08 – Price and Value
        02:28 – Design
        05:06 – Storage
        08:30 – Internal Hardware
        12:51 – Conclusion
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      119. Hello, Does an storage external HHD only powered up every 6 months have to be refreshed to another HHD every 3 to 5 years to prevent data loss? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.????????
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      120. Do I win a prize for having the most disks inside a Jonsbo N3 Case – 18?

        8 x 3.5″ HDDs, 4 x NVMe SSDs (PCIe x16 slot – quad NVMe card) plus 6 x 2.5″ SATA SSDs (2 using the upper case supports, 2 using a dual-bay expansion slot bracket and 2 stuck on top of the PSU).
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      121. Thanks to your channel and excellent videos I chose the N2 case 2-3 months ago and I’m very happy with it.

        In it I built the following:
        ————————————–
        sata card —- MZHOU ASM1166 6xSATA PCIe 3.0 x4
        cpu —- Raptor Lake i5-14500T + Termalright LGA1700 Frame
        cpu cooler —- Noctua NH-L12 Ghost S1 Edition
        motherboard —- ASRock Z790M-ITX WiFi
        ram —- Kingston FURY Beast RGB 64GB DDR5
        ZFS Mirror —- 2x Kingston FURY Renegade 500GB
        ZFS Raidz2 —- 5x Western Digital Red Plus 6TB
        case —- Jonsbo N2 White
        psu —- HDPLEX 250W GaN Passive
        case cooler —- Noctua NF-A12x25

        Some notes:
        ——————–
        – the 25mm case cooler fitted perfectly with right angled Sata power and data cables
        – it’s currently running proxmox with multiple services on the mirrored zfs
        – the cpu is a 14 core, 20 thread beast and zfs keeps my ram usage busy
        – the rgb ram was on sale, so don’t judge me lol
        – i do wish it were 6 bay at least, that would have been perfect for raidz2
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      122. after few good months of using my N3 what I can say:
        1- with 5 Noctua fans inside, I have temperature of HDDs always around 35C (I can set this up anything between 30 adn 50C from my Home Assistant) and that is with around 25% of the fans speed
        2- similarly CPU and NVMe – very low temperatures – actually NVMe are around 25C and CPU around 40C
        3- the bays… hmm, that was ONE TIME issue while putting the disks, after that… install and forget
        4- I put inside: 4x WD and 2x… 2.5″ Crucial SSD – yeap, the m2 slots on my mobo are used as boot disks (in mirror) so no way of reusing them for fast storage
        5- storage speed: my mobo has 4x 2.5Gbps NICs, and I connected 2 of them – from my SSD pool I can copy with around 230MB/s, from my HDD pool: … 230MB/s – cannot see the difference 😉
        6- power consumption: average 40W
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      123. 10:30 Jonsbo shows an image of the N3 with a de-branded MSI RTX 3070 Ventus OC 2X inside the case in their website, so you might be able to fit some mid to mid-high end cards in there providing they’re not longer than 250mm. Though the best card to go with it IMO would be the RTX 4000 Ada SFF, which is only slightly worse than the RTX 4090 but is a half height 2 slot card which requires no PCIe power connectors.
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      124. This layout actually sucks. The backplane is going to make it very difficult to install an Icy Dock if you want to run SSD only. Otherwise you could install 12 SSD’s into those 3.5″ slots.
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      125. This should have 8 drive supports full 3.5 and full 170 mm cpu cooler support. Then it could also fit full size gpus and order pci-e cards. Pci-e is the future of storage cards and other types of cards. Jonsbo really did a swing and miss here. Maybe a n6 will come that will fix it all?
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      126. Will this support sfx-l or just sfx psu’s? I’ve bought the case in the ali holiday celebration at 98 quid with delivery (which I feel is worth it for my needs) and looking for a PSU to pair with it. I see a really nice deal on an sfx-l but worry about fitting length in.
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      127. I thing showing off a plain old linux (ubuntu, fedora or anything, of course server flavour) with Cockpit would be nice. (there’s addon for smb/nfs, zfs and podman)
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      128. A Chinese netizen named “曝躁老鸽” launched a computer case named “Treasure寶藏盒” a long time ago.
        However, this “Jonsbo N4” product clearly plagiarizes his work.
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      129. Hello there, Im looking to get into the homlab community and build my own server.
        After a bit of research I came across a very interesting case that barely anybody in the YT homelab / NAS realm seems to be aware of.

        Im talking about the Aerocool Cipher mid tower case. There are only 2 videos about it on whole YT, despite it having space for 12 sata hdd’s and costs only around 80€.
        Maybe you find the time to take a look at it.
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      130. Wow. another great video. Thanks so much for all the excellent content. I’ve been gearing up to replace my old Dell PowerEdge r510 12-HDD server. It’s such a noise generator and power hog. I wonder if you could maybe do a video that focuses on daisy-chaining servers for more space. I don’t want to manage multiple Unraid instances. What I’d like to do is set up one server and then attach multiple SANs as my library grows.
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      131. Thaks a lot for this! It made building my N2 NAS a breeze. Different motherboard, different power supply, but this video is an excellent resource in any case.
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      132. Id be interested in seeing how higher quality fans would make a difference in the cooling capability, like replacing that stock 120mm fan with a Phanteks T30, and adding an 60 or 80mm Noctua as an intake in the top right 2 3.5in drive bays (since there’s no SATA/SAS backplane there anyway) that would give cool air to both the PSU and bottom of the motherboard.

        You could mod fans into the top cover as well but then you’d have to deal with the cables every time you open it, unless you add some thin pieces of metal to mount the fans to
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      133. I’m getting Fractal Design Terra vibes. Maybe they’re hoping to pair the two things together? Although why Fractal and others don’t do their own, I’ll never know. And in an ideal world, why not do the Terra in a mid sized version as well, and do things like case with built in or modular area for a NAS so we can stop having unnecessary additional boxes everywhere.
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      134. Jonsbo N4 Mini feels more like a case that tries to be cheaper and more available “System 76” cases – but more into a “SFF PC with some media” instead of “Home Nas”

        Tho… honestly making a slim Video editing case… with ERYING Mobile CPU mobos.. or Intel Core “T” chip + low profile A380… could be a interesting thing to try

        and since it has already places for storage.. instead of making it a NAS, use SSD for OS and the SAS area for RAID storage which this video editing machine would be based on
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      135. Вот отличная видеокарта для этого корпуса GIGABYTE GeForce RTX 4060 OC Low Profile [GV-N4060OC-8GL], а остальные отсеки без Горячей замены из-за блока питания. Т.ч. это компромиссы. Лично для меня этот корпус то что мне нужно.
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      136. 10:12 – you dont need a base/side level vent because you should install the PSU upside down, so that it also helps the two HDDs and SSDs with cooling by sucking the air from the front of the case, passing through the HDDs/SSDs and exhausting it via the back, just like the 120 fan is doing it for the other half of the case
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      137. N4 is a stopgap solution for Jonsbo, Because most of these manufacturers have at least one product line support: MATX + SFX PSU + 6 to 8 bay.

        Even its design is nothing new, that wooden panel and half height PCIE design was there 3 years ago, looks cool and the cooling is actually bad
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      138. IMO this was a downgrade in comparison to the N3 simply because the N3 is a smaller case for Minit-ITX mobos, but it can fit 8 3.5″ drives into a backplane. And it’s not like they couldn’t simply maintain the 8 drive structure from the N3 and add the extra two spaces for 2.5″ drives. You can comfortably fit 10 drives in there if they go vertical like they are in the N2 and N3.
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      139. 0:38: ???? Review of the latest Jonsbo N4 NAS case highlighting its aesthetic design and potential software options.
        2:39: ⚙️ Analysis of storage bays and interfaces in Jonsbo N4 NAS Case.
        4:44: ⚙️ Limitations of GPU and storage card compatibility in Jonsbo N4 NAS Case.
        7:42: ⚙️ Limitations in cooling capabilities of the M ATX case may hinder performance potential.
        9:43: ⚠️ Challenges with PSU placement and airflow in the Jonsbo N4 NAS Case.

        Timestamps by Tammy AI
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      140. While you’re points are valid, for most use cases it won’t matter. NAS only can be run by a dual core and a low height cooler. mATX typically has 2 nvme. You can add a dual or quad low height nvme card(s). If you are going to run it as more of a server then a NAS, all of that above still applies as most Homelab server builds are typically running the CPU at 50% or less most of the time. If you have an Intel chip, you can use the iGPU for transcoding. So, while this case could be improved, I wouldn’t let any of this stop you if you need mATX. Cooling for the drives may be an issue depending on your environment but you can put a fan or two above the PSU.
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      141. Some really sus design choices for an otherwise good case. Ideas for the eventual N5 case: Clone the left side of the hard drive compartment to the right, but make the second backplane an optional upsell if you’re that concerned about cost Jonsbo. Keep the Micro-Atx mobo compatibility but allow for full height/length add-on cards and use the required increase in compartment space to include a pair 120mm fan mounts on one side. Ditch the rubber bands for actual drive sleds (even stamped sheet metal would be an improvement). Because at $142.31 (shipping included and a 25% off base price discount) you’re approaching Silverstone territory (CS380 ($239.99)/CS382($249.99)) price-wise. As it stands with the N4 the juice (money saved vs SST) is not worth the squeeze.
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      142. I hope the 8 bay Ugreen works out. If they lock it down super hard between now and May so I’d be forced to use their shitty software, I think I can cancel the pledge.

        All Jonsbo needs to do is release a bigger Jonsbo N3 with 120/140mm rear fan(s), drive trays that don’t suck, 8 bays, etc.
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      143. You’re just set on it being some top of the line power system and the whole review is about how it’s not something else, including the rubbers that are great for a design ‘not too huge living room piece’ 🙂
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      144. This actually is great for my use case, but I just can’t justify spending about $200 for what amounts to just a case swap. I know most of that is just shipping to the states but still, it’s mostly just a (very nice) cosmetic upgrade to what I’m using now.
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      145. The N4 looks pretty but its performance is worse then N3 my favourite still is the N2 after modding you can install a thicker fun on the back and SSD cage on the side after removing the hex key.
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      146. This box design is quite schtewpid, innit ?

        I don’t see why would anyone choose this case over a N3. MATX support is useless if you can’t fit large cards, just stick with ITX.

        I think a Define R6 (or XL if you need more drives) is cheaper and you can slightly mod it to fit a SAS backplane with the proper SFF connectors.
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      147. Another great presentation on a NAS case, well done and thank you for all your videos. Personally, I would like to see an Unraid installation on this Jonsbo N4 case. I have watched many of your presentations and was seriously considering the Jonsbo N3 case for my NAS solution. However, delivery delays and the PSU being a 1U limitation meant that the SFX PSU I already had available could not be used. In the end I plumbed for a Silverstone CS380, with my Corsair 850 FSX PSU, ASUS micro ATX motherboard, 16 Gbyte DDR4, AMD Ryzen 5 5600G with on board graphics and a low profile Noctua cooling fan I had as a spare. Twin 2.5 G ethernet ports and a 8 port SATA card in the PCIe slots. I used Unraid as it was the only one to support different disc sizes in the storage pool and has ZFS, so storage wise 18 Tb parity disc, 18 Tb, 16 TB and two 6 TB HDD, two 2Tb NVMe drives, One 2TB SSD Cache pool, one 2TB SSD RAID 1 cache pool. So, I would love to see how this N4 setup compares with my CS380 NAS using using Unraid, different HDD sized discs in the storage pool with ZFS and maybe multiple cache pools with the NVMe slots. I will be intereseted to know what the cabling is like to get maximum use out of the available slots.
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      148. I just built mine with a Audheid K7 8 bay, cheap but I like the drive bays, and aesthetics. Sharp edges, light weight, cooling options could be improved, but over all, I liked the 1u flex power supply, as I purchased a eco bronze efficiency PS.
        As my other server is an older dual Xeon 600watt dual power sully, that can double as a space heater, even at idle.
        This one can run 24-7, at 75watts idle before the 8 drives spin down to standby.
        I was looking for an ATX option before deciding on the eco option.
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      149. I own this case. Some issues are: My 24-pin atx cable from my Corsair SF750 is slightly too short to make the run on the w680ace mobo. The aforementioned 4-bay hotswap instead of 6 is not the end of the world. Half-height cards aren’t the end of the world either. The good thing about this case is it looks amazing. 12600k CPU temps with the Noctua L12S (Low profile mode) are great, I have only seen it go to 44 degrees under load. 4 8 TB drives only stay around 41-44 degrees with Noctua fans at 840rpm. I’d say it’s a good chassis if you don’t mind the small footprint and only 4 hot swaps.
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      150. I’m almost positive I saw a a full NAS advertised that used that same case! I bet they made it for somebody and decided that since they had all the tooling set up they might as well release it under there own name.
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      151. They just copied another Chinese NAS case called the “Treasure Box”, which has eight 3.5inch bays and MATX motherboard.

        The Jonsbo NAS cases are really not that great, and not priced competitively. There is another case called the “Sagittarius”, also eight hotswap 3.5inch bays and MATX and retails for CN¥349 which is about US$48.
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      152. i watch other video and it has backplane on each 4 bays. you can search this video ” Finalizing my NAS build based on the 9-bay Chinese motherboard and case ”
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      153. i got so excited for a moment thinking that the n4 had space for more 3.5″ drives than the n3. I’ve been waiting for a bigger n3 for a while now and i’m so close to pulling the gun on a node 804 instead
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      154. Oh god, if I try to buy this case I’ll get it end of May…. And it’s 170 Dollars with the delivery to boot. It’s a beautiful case, but I’ll pass. Do try to make a OMV machine with it, should be fun.
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      155. Great experiments! May I ask What’s the power consumption of this DIY NAS? Also if we don’t mind put the power block into the case, can I use my old pc regular power block to power up this DIY NAS? Many thanks!
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      156. In the days of lore, way back, when Drobo first appeared and later all the little NAS boxen were born; I decided that they were too expensive and way under-powered. Then I found a way to build my own home lab NAS, one where I could host containers as well as serve shares, etc. This predates Unraid and TrueNAS. Many pros were building rackmount 4U servers but then came along some very well suited m-ITX server boards. Supermicro, Asrock, Gigabyte, etc. The first build utilized Joyent’s fork of OpenSolaris and their base image called SmartOS, providing ZFS, Zones, networking, etc. in a private cloud. Then Linux became capable of the same (Joyent was bought by Samsung and development slowed). I switched to Ubuntu Server with LXD to manage native containers and VM’s and Microk8s for Kubernetes. I was even able to import my zpool. But now I am thinking I may switch to TrueNAS Scale and build a 3rd generation NAS with a Jonsbo NAS case. Newer m-ITX boards have come a long way. The advent of those M.2 PCIe SATA adapters, will free up the 16x PCIe slot allowing for dual 10GbE network card. Ultimately, home builds can be built for less but if you put a bit more power into the build, you get a lot more out of it. However, you will end up being more expensive but your NAS will be more of a home lab server.
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      157. Little late to the party, but they give you more than enought rubber grommets for the drives that you can use four on each drive plus the pull on the front of them.
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      158. I have the same NAS case, and I’m curious about your hard drives’ behavior. Mine are always active and noisy, even when not in use. Do you experience the same issue with your setup?
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      159. Would you make an episode about what’s better? UnRAID or TrueNAS? What gives more possibilities? What is updated more often? And what, in general, will be a better solution?
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      160. I have been using this case for a couple months for my Unraid server which hosts PLEX. It’s an amazing case. I use an Intel 12500t which is pretty powerful for my needs and low power usage but I also have an RTX 3060 in the case because I got a really good deal on it and use it to auto convert media to be more compatible with families playback devices. It’s overkill but it’s awesome and this case handles it all fine. The GPU gets fresh air from the side vent and I added two 80mm Noctua fans to the top back for exhaust so they pull in air from the front and sides which gives fresh air to the CPU cooler and gets rid of all of the hot air in the top section. This little case for me holds 164 TB. 160 in HDD(8x20TB) and a 4TB Sata SSD for a cache drive and for Unraid/PLEX meta data. I could use an M.2 for cache but it’s not needed.

        I have my PSU so it pulls in fresh air from the front of the case and exhausts it out of the side and for the extra data ports I used an M.2 to SATA adapter. it has 6 additional SATA ports so with all of what I have I still have an available data slot.

        If you want a great case for a NAS or home server and want to keep it pretty small, this is the way to go. There are smaller options but this one has the benefit of amazing cooling performance…at least for a NAS case.
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      161. Thanks for the great info. 
        I have just built my home made NAS based on this tutorial with Unraid and it is spinning away happily on my table.
        I deviated slightly by going with the Node 304 case which I purchased locally from eBuyer for £74 delivered and the same board with 4 GB memory and the 128 GB NVME from Amazon for £151. With the saving I also added a 10 Gbe PCI card from Ali Express for £71 and a Hisource 4 port 2.5 Gbe + 2 10 Gbe uplink ports for for £29 from Ali Express
        I have to admit that getting the 10 Gbe link working with Unraid (!***!) was a bit stressful, but everything now works as it should.
        Onwards and upwards and thanks again.
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      162. I have two Lacie. One in my office and one at home. Can you do a video on how to link these two so that they act as backups of each other? If you already have done something like that, please send me that way.
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      163. Thank you so much for this detailed video. I used it for my own Jonsbo N2 build and it was so helpful with the step-by-step instructions and guidance on the gotchas. It saved me so much time to pre-plan. Excellent video!
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      164. Hey, as this vid is 4 months old, I just wanted to ask if the mobo is holding out good? I’ve been considering it myself, just wondering if theres anything you found out later that someone looking to buy one may want to know before making a decision. Cheers for the good vid ????
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      165. While I get the confusion about several different screws types used, I do generally appreciate hex screws.
        Phillips is a nightmare waiting to strip. For me it could all be torx haha
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      166. HI, Great vid! I must have watched this a few times now, and am currently building my own. Currently unable to track down the pdf for the header pin layout. Did you ever add the link in for that?
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      167. Does anyone know anything about the SATA Power Connector on the back plane? I can see the 2 molex connectors powering the drives, but is the SATA necessary or just in case a power supply only has on molex. I’m confused. Jonsbo has answered all of my questions, except that one and of course the instructions are……well you know.
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      168. Am not sure whether to lean towards the N2 or N3 ???? probably go with a ROG mini-ITX board and smash in a decent Ryzen processor and bags of memory as-well. Wish to have something that can leave on 24/7 that will run Proxmox to cover all my needs ie. PfSense/OPNSense, Storage and probably a mail server. Would welcome your thoughts please and keep up the great work ????
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      169. This video is really well done. I have been trying to give an answer to this question for four years now. The problem is summarized at the end of the video. My time costs much more than what I save by building it myself “from scratch”. But on the other hand I am too stingy , and I like to build things myself. Frustration.
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      170. Have we figured out the power plug weirdness? I am also doubtful that three plugs are required, what makes the most sense to me is one dedicated cable plug for molex, and one dedicated cable plug for sata since most modern psu will only have one cable for molex, i have this on order and want to try it but it seems everyone just plugs in all three
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      171. I am kind of sad that I got this case now. Looks like I am stuck with max 4 drives if I want to do 10gb fiber NIC. I tried to find a way to do bifurcation that would allow 10gb nic + the 8 drives sata. I did buy an NVME to SATA but only support is 3.0 and its rather slow when booting. Not sure I really trust it either for the long hall that would allow 8 drives to be used. But then you loose ability to do mirrored cache pool. Just every little road block that makes this thing not ideal and as stated having it in a bigger form factor would be way better. It would be nice if you could do the ultimate Jonsbo N3 build and show us how to overcome what I perceive are limitations. Support all 8 drives, 10gb network and dual mirrored NVME cache pool.
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      172. The price of the shipping from Aliexpress not only varies, but can make or break your budget so it should definitely not be left out. For example here are the prices as of Nov 2023:
        Jonsbo N2 (Aliexpress): $93 + $97 shipping to the US = $190
        Jonsbo N2 (Amazon): $150
        Jonsbo N2 (Newegg): $140

        Jonsbo N3 (Aliexpress): $117 + $99 shipping = $216
        Jonsbo N3 (Amazon): $170
        Jonsbo N3 (Newegg): $162

        As you can see, if you are in the US it’s a no-brainer to buy the case from Amazon/Newegg as Aliexpress offers an inferior shipping experience.
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      173. Imagine they would’ve gone for mATX – its entirely possible in that size and they come with up to 3x PCIe Ports and sometimes 6 SATA ports too …

        I also really don’t like how they’ve not even tought about the possibility of someone using these slots for 2.5 inch e.g. for SATA-SSDS.

        A backplane like this makes it really hard to use without any kind of attempt in proper design by the manufacturer (port multipliers, adapters, what gives, what takes … in the end you can only remove the backplane). For me these two points make these sadly a hard pass 🙁 – as I would gain nothing from those extra 3 slots.

        Who in the world uses just 8 mechanical drives. SSDs are so much better for many things (power consumption too), and are nothing special but more or less a given use-case for many of us looking into slowly adopting many parts towards flash storage as they become cheaper and cheaper …
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      174. Which diy NAS would you recommend to someone who is going to use it as a Jellyfin server for movies and transcoding movies to phones. Also might use it to hold basic documents/photos.
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      175. Just a couple notes on this as I have the same case. First if you did NOT use the angled sata cables on the backplane they won’t warranty the case. Second I found a flat dual molex adapter that saved me even more room. Between the angled sata cables (same slim blue your using with 90 degree one end), and the molex adapter I was able to replace that loud inefficient 15mm fan with the standard 25mm one. Also replaced those grates on both side with basic wire grills. Both those things got me better air flow as well as less noise.
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      176. i’m a bit disappointed, your title said you were gonna build a NAS, but you just assembled a NAS :/ (i was expecting electronic component tinkering, not computer parts tinkering…)
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      177. I have just built a TopTon board (Same version) with a Jonsbo case. One note is you can actually fit that board out with 64Gb Mem so Truenas has plenty of spare capacity. I also spec’d out a lot better power supply just for the peace of mind. Wish you had done this review earlier as I would have gone with the case you had.
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      178. The limitations and drawbacks of this N3 case as you outlined really shoots some major holes in the feasibility of this DIY NAS. Looks like I’ll be sticking to my Synology 8-bay or Asustor (for cheaper 2-6 bay setups) units for awhile longer it seems.

        If Jonsbo ever does a N4 with the fixes/limitations worked out…maybe then I’ll start weighing a “might-try” then. Probably a year or two more wait, I guess…with also more stability with pricing and availability to come as well. Cheers.
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      179. I’m a little confused… Did you show the correct extra parts (Re: video ~35:00)? Of the four parts shown, it seems that I would need (1) of the parts shown (top & bottom right side parts), but nothing from the left top/bottom parts. Additionally, if I select either top or bottom right side parts then I now have (2) 20-pin connectors (one from the front panel USB and one from the adapter (top/bottom right side parts)) which now need to go to a 20-pin + 20-pin splitter (not shown on your display of parts). Unfortunately, my Topton MoBo has not arrived yet so I can’t reference what is there in order to understand what’s what with all the parts you showed. Can you provide any more clarity to this? Thank you so much and thanks, again, for making this very informative video!!!!
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      180. Investing that much time and effort probably isn’t worth it unless you have time to waste or very specific possibly high-end applications.
        Also, you may want to got get a more current ITX board + CPU for more performance and RAM in this case.
        Honestly for a simple setup like that it probably is better connecting something like a TerraMaster D5-300C or ORICO-NS500RC3 to a Raspberry Pi.
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      181. I dont think you save so much time going turn key as you have to learn the software. Easiest is take an old machine, install Nas software learn how it fits in your life. Then upgrade hardware later. As a person whos built many computers, the hardware part wasnt the issue. Learning the Truenas/Proxmox/Unraid interface probably didnt take longer than the Synology interface. Now I have a machine which can grow cheaply if needed.
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      182. Those front USB connectors are standard, USB3 and USB3.1 for the Type A and Type C connector respectively, and are found on most modern motherboards. That Topton board is made as cheaply as possible, so it only has basic USB2 connectors, which is why they wouldn’t fit.
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      183. Totally a great replacement for another orange channel. You explain everything that you had to go through and other options to tackle those issues. Great vid! It s subscribe for me bud!
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      184. Great review. I bought this case, it took a very long time to arrive, but when it did the things you pointed out on video is what I felt too. I think the bit of this case that annoys me the most is they use 100mm fans at the back (bottom) and 80mm at the top. 100mm is a odd size, to the point you cannot really buy fans. As in noctua dont make a 100mm. Moreover, I agree with no caddies, dont like the rubber bits. Also the hdds do rattle a lot, so dont feel its that well dampered. I would say its a good case for the money, 8 drives. But I wish the cooling was on the drives, not at the back, which means drives dont get great cooling. Overall, 6/10 for me
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      185. according to Topton, the pin headers on their motherboards (N5xxx and N6xxx) is only USB 2.0, were you able to confirm/deny it? The blue ports on the mobo however are indeed 3.x
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      186. On a b550-i strix you can easily use a 5sata port m.2 adapter, use it on the front m.2 4.0 slot and use a nvme boot drive on the back m.2 3.0 port and you have the 2slot pcie slot free for a GPU or whatever. And you were complaining about having 4 pegs on the drive to go into the rail….. In your video you are missing the pegs that screw into the middle of the drive to guide it on the rails.
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      187. Looking at this the N3 for just a bunch of drives, I initially thought about using 2.5″ SSD’s with adapters in place of the 3.5″ drives. But with the price of NVMe drives nearing the price of 2.5″ SSD’s I am mulling over stripping out the SATA board in the bottom of this case and installing a powered USB hub getting power from the molex on the PSU and installing a bank of individual USB enclosures populated with whatever NVMe drives I choose – connected to the USB 3 motherboard connector. Any thoughts or suggestions or limitations on my idea?
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      188. You can use an M.2 breakout card for more SATA connections, for example if you have two M.2 slots or a free WiFi slot the “ChenYang M.2 M-Key PCI adapter” for full length or “MZHOU M.2 SATA Adapter” for WiFi slot length.
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      189. a.) Yes, the PSU should slide-in from the back. IDK why they mount it inside the case.
        b.) You can get PCIM-Key M.2 to 6X SATA 3 adapter and put it the mobo’d 2nd M.2 slot, if you’re willing to give up mirrored boot drives.
        c.) If rubber drive mounting washers really bug you, print some rails to replace them. Still have to deal with the rubber handle, though.

        Would be nice to know about the SATA power connector on the drive backplane. Also, the maximum size CPU cooler that will fit.
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      190. Maybe it’s just me, but I would never buy this to do anything other than handle data and I don’t need an ATX motherboard to do that. I use a board similar to the one you used in your N2 build, but it was designed for openwrt and has a N6005 on it. I have the N2 and I’d never want it or the other anywhere near me due to fan noise (it lives in the garage with the car). While I see your point about the GPU vs using a 10gbe card, I’d rather just go with 2.5gbe as I really don’t think my zfs setups would benefit very much and most modern itx boards will have 2.5gbe. I also love the way they do drive mounting as it cuts down on a ton of vibration. Unless you are taking the drives out all the time, not sure why you need a tray. Yes, if I have a drive failure, it will take me more time to change the drive as I will likely have to take the back off to help push the drive out. . but I still really like the rubber mounting system. My only complaint on the N2 would probably be the same for the N3 – fan noise. I guess I’ll have to wait an see how the PSU goes into that unit, but the N3 is a few years away for me.
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      191. A few critiques of the review:

        1. It is common for ITX boards to have a front and back m.2 slot. Running a 5 or 6 port m.2 to sata adapter is inexpensive and doesn’t interfere with expandability

        2. I’m not sure (and you didn’t really say) why you are hesitant about PSU extension cables, but as long as it is a sufficient gauge (which it is), it’s fine

        3. You can use any two power connectors to power all 8 drives
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      192. I don’t understand the obsession with the ITX NAS cases. Any economy of savings you might enjoy by the DIY nature are absolutely murdered by the limited selection and significantly higher costs ITX mobos present. Give me a full ATX or even mATX any day of the week…

        Personally, my NAS is currently living in a Rosewill Blackhawk ATX case repurposed from an ancient PC build.
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      193. In Australia I had to order my unit through Ali Express. Their store is atrocious! The title of the page CLEARLY stated: “JONSBO N3 N2 N1 Mini NAS Case ITX …” but then the ‘colorway’ defaults to “N2 white’. You had to make sure you pick the right unit (N1, N2 and N3) through the COLORWAY! I didn’t check and purchase the N2 instead of the N3 and they refused to allow for return because it’s CLEARLY stated. I would dispute that. Don’t get me wrong, I have no issue with the product itself. I agree with your assessment that the fan size is effing crazy! Who makes 100mm and 80mm fans! Other than all that, I like the case. It feels high quality built, it’s the smallest form I can find on the market to fit 8 HDDs!
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      194. Jonsbo seems to make some great cases but the N3 is in a bit of a weird spot for me.
        Though the N3 has some marked improvements over N2, personally I think it is best to either stick with the N2 for a compact NAS, or if you are after more expandability, might as well choose a mATX case for almost the same footprint as the N3 and gain not only more drive slots but also more PCIe slots and usually cheaper motherboards as well.
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      195. Well, I think this wasn’t a very good/informative review. More like 25 min of rambling, why this is a very bad case. Is it a bad case though? The conclusion and the vibe I good during the video are very different.
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      196. 5:50 The N2 does have drive LEDs, but they’re not visible if you use 3.5″ drives. The backplane has 2 surface mount LEDs for each drive, green for power and blue for activity. If you use 2.5″ drives with a backplane-compatible 2.5″-to-3.5″ adapter, you’ll see diffuse blue flashing through the case’s front as each drive does its thing (the green LED is blocked by the adapter/drive).
        Jonsbo seems to be listening to feedback and improving their designs with each iteration, and I think that’s why the N3 moved the LEDs to the case panel instead.
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      197. What about small mATX boards like the ASRock H610M-HVS or H610M-HDV? Both of them are around 2cm larger than a mITX board and they usually fit in mITX cases that are a bit more roomy
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      198. On nas compares web page you indicate the middle/top builds in the cons section higher power consumption, how much more we talking compared to a synology/Qnap 8 bay? considering the price of energy now a days and with these on 24/7.
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      199. Can’t wait for the build video. Watched your N2 build video and looked at your guides and saw the N3. I knew I wanted the N3 for my dream NAS.
        As for the issue with the drive pull, perhaps for those with access to a 3d printer, there may be some solutions on Thingiverse or similar sites. I know it’s not something we should be forced to resort to, but it’s an option.
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      200. @NASCompares – There are M.2 to Multi Sata connector cards as well, and you could get an ITX board with Multiple M.2 or use the internal Sata Drive for OS or a CACHE drive.
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      201. The case is good. Its the mobo offering that sucks. All we need is an itx mobo with 10gbit, ecc ram, 8xsata, 2x m.2 and something like N100 for that 6W TDP passively cooled cpu. For… hmm… 250€
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      202. I think you miss something about the rubber disk mounts. Certain types of rubber under prolonged exposure to heat can disintegrate. In a NAS case a few years from now, it will go sticky and rot away. What then?
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      203. This case is probably one of the best options, but it still has so many problems. That one from Silverstone supports ATX, but supposedly the backplane is shit and the HDD cooling is not good.

        It would just be nice if there was a NAS case with a good backplane, good ventilation for drives, good cooler support, ATX support, good HDD trays, etc.
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      204. This may be a language difference, but on this side of the ocean, we call them either motherboard or mainboards. The term card is generally reserved for ‘add in cards’. Additionally, PSUs in weird places is somewhat normal for small form factor cases.
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      205. Been waiting for this video after informing you there was this new case incoming.

        Could you not use a nvme sata adapter that has the data ports on them, yh I know it will use the slot up but some itx mb have more than 1
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      206. your antiquated selection is crap in 2023.
        Fractal Design Node 804 – Black
        MSI PRO B550M-VC WiFi ProSeries Motherboard
        Ryzen 7 5700G 8-core, 16-Thread Processor
        Thermalright AXP120-X67 WHITE ARGB Low Profile CPU Air Cooler
        Corsair VENGEANCE LPX DDR4 RAM 32GB (2x16GB) 3200MHz
        WD_BLUE SN570 1TB M.2 2280 PCIe Gen3
        IBM M5015 Array Card, Megaraid 9260-8i SATA/SAS Controller RAID 6G PCI-E x8
        INTEL Original X540-T2 Ethernet Converged Network Adaptor X540T2BLK
        8×3.5 drives, + 8x 2.5 drives & small cage
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      207. Congratulations on the 100K it is quite an accomplishment. Brilliant video. Fantastic presentation. I have a big unraid system featuring a Xeon E3 with 16 bays. but I do EVERTHIING on this. I have never regretted building my own NAS.
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      208. Beautiful build, nicely done, and I love the “on the cheap” side of things (so much, must be the Scottish in me ????) Makes me want to do this rather than get another Synology. I have the skills, but Synology just made things so “easy” that I got lazy. Thanks for the video and congrats on 100K! Here’s to the next 900K ????
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      209. I built one from used parts on eBay, for the magic price of about £187, 10 SAS 2tb drives i picked up for 80 quid, Dell H200 perc 24 quid( needed firmware changing to LSI SAS 9210-8i ), the motherboard (FM2 with 8gb of DDR 3 and 500w PSU) came to together from what someone was tipping, 64gb SSD OS disk i picked up for around 7 quid, eBay again, the only build that was new was the Mini SAS 36Pin SFF-8088 to 4 x 29Pin SFF-8482 SATA Power Cable 0.5m 20 quid, 2 x Molex to 4 SATA power cable 10 quid and a new ATX case from Amazon for around 30 quid, i manage to pick up 6 BEQUIET 120mm fans for 16 quid, i used TrueNas 12 at the time, now been updated to version13, it runs as my SMB and plex server, its on a 1Gb Lan of which i can use nearly all of the bandwidth maintaining 110MB all the time download(single user at a time), at the end of the day, i really enjoyed building it, it was fun, Im planning on building more, good stuff
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      210. I can afford to buy a branded NAS, but I prefer to go through similar to what you see in this video, not because I want to appear tech savvy, but because of the drinking involved during and after the build. I especially relish the heavy drinking involved when it fails and I have no one to blame but myself. Cheers!
        ????????
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      211. I got the same mobo (justo with the intel N6005)… there’s an internal USB port… just sayin its safer tu put the usb in ther so no one “accidentally ” pulls it out… huge mistake I made with going with a pico PSU… changed it to a 400w… no working fine… thank you for your videos! ther really helped deciding what to get!… went also with unraid
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      212. “Best Jonsbo N2 Build for Under/Around £250”
        You need a maths lesson, parts included in this comes to around £300 not £250 (based on your pricing shown)
        Also pricing is a lot higher than you stated form the sources you stated, and you use both £ and $ which is confusing /constructive criticism use one or the other
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      213. 49:16 Well I personally usually chek that 127 other things in the BIOS to make sure I don’t have to reinstall the whole system just because I changed something like SecureBoot only after I installed the OS. 🙂
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      214. Hey – nice job here. There is also the value of the learning that is in depth – you can also upgrade individual components to go with as you need. The cost of upgrading a turn key is quite a bit larger – you have about the same 2x factor I think. Interesting – worth the hour invested to watch here!
        And congratulations!
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      215. I just built one for my friend, N6005 + 16 RAM + H6 case + 1 TB NVME SSD + 250W PSU + Unraid Plus, and spent nearly £330.

        Of course, I was building this while in China, so the shipping cost is way lower, but spent another £25 mailing it to UK.
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      216. Hey, I’ve been looking for an alternative to my NAS as mine is currently my old gamingpc, which is complete overkill and higher than ideal power consumption.

        Can I as, why this wouldn’t be good to use with TrueNAS at it seemingly fits their hardware requirements.

        I’m a bit new to all this, so please excuse me if this is a dumb question.
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      217. I *loved* this build video. So much detail, great explanation, and it is clearly a done with love for this topic. I’d be interested in a similar build video if you can find a low-cost build with drive trays rather than those off rubber-pull attachments.
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      218. It’s not just about the time spent. It’s about how much your data is worth. If you’re not thinking about things like patrol reads and notifications on disk failures. Rebuild processes for the array. Those types of things… you can end up with bit rot or data loss when not noticing hardware failures.
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      219. It’s so weird to me that JONSBO is a brand of NAS now, when fifteen years ago JONSBO was a line of table lamps at IKEA. (Rather nice ones, too!)

        (Unlike a lot of other IKEA product names, JONSBO does not appear to be a Swedish placename, but there was a 20th Century Norwegian artist named Kåre Mikkelsen Jonsborg so maybe that’s the etymology idk)
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      220. Pretty Nice Video of this build! But the most important question i have is how high is the power consumption ? Is it the same like the Qnap / Synology or is the power consumption much higher because Qnap / Synology did some optimization of their used components ?
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      221. “Sorry Captain Planet” you had a few clever comments. I have a Synology DS213 that I now realize is 10 years old but it’s all I need with 2 1TB WD Red drives in hybrid. If I had the need I’d be into building my own.
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      222. New to your channel. NASCompares and you’ve never built a NAS from scratch before?! You can build one better than any QNAP, Synology, etc. for less. As for the USB connectors from the case. They match EXACTLY what they are since one is USB 3.0 and the other is USB-C 3.2. There is nothing non-standard about them. The issue is your motherboard only has USB 2.0.
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      223. Brilliant video! This is the best tutorial and guide I’ve seen for building a fully-functional, do-it-yourself NAS. I especially appreciated the step-by-step details, and your objective, brand and device-specific recommendations, evaluations, and critiques of each of the components. The Unraid solution allowing the use of such an enormous variety and size of SATA disk drives is likewise amazing. You have motivated me to take this on myself. Thank you! Now subscribed.
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      224. Been down both paths for 20+ years. If I want to impress my peers I build my own servers. If I want to impress my family get a Synology. Played with Unraid to make hardware pass through setups with Windows XP/98 systems and 3DFX and Creative EAX cards and its an ongoing project, fraught with many many issues. They are fun projects, but you will get to the stage that other hobbies call you and a Synology is the way to go. After all, we don’t live forever and the kids will inherit them, so they need something less IT knowledge base intensive.
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      225. I’ve been looking to upgrade my Synology to a DS423+ or similar, that’s what brought me here.
        But, from what I could see, this build is just not worth the cost or hassle when I can get a pre-built unit with Synology’s DSM that is basically plug and play. Great if you want to build your own system for the hell of it, but personally I just can’t justify the time.
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      226. One recomendation I would make is using a way better power supply like an FSP or Sparkle to enhance the reliability and stability of the build (start with a good foundation) and to turn the power supply around so the vents allow the power supply to suck in cool air and the rear to exit the heat. Most newer motherboard do use the USB3 connectors provided by Jonsbo. The rest of the video is great. Congratulations to your subscriptions! Dr. Dave
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      227. Hmm way less money then i thought. Built my own stuff sense my early teens but never looked in to NAS. Now days whit all the data we have on our hands this might be a good time to start my first NAS project. Grats on 100k and thanks for the info.
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      228. What a fantastic guide! I THANK YOU!
        I’ve assembled PC last time probably 35 years ago – not many things have changed since then I can see.
        Btw why did you go with 5105 rather than 6005? No big price difference there…

        You have kept the t-shirt but you have changed the watch between the recordings – even 2 times !!! 😉
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      229. No, thank you for the fantastic video. Hope you hit 200k soon you guys deserve it. Really appreciate the thorough details My one tip would be to invest in a build mat for that poor old scratched table, helps dampen noise, stops things rolling, can be anti static or have a brand logo.
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      230. Congrats on 100k! This was an interesting video… I look forward to seeing you put it through it’s paces. It’s a shame that the Jonesbo case only holds five 3.5″ drives, though… if it at least held the full 6 that motherboard and cable supported, it might be more of a contender for my next upgrade dollars, once my 4-bay Synology is no longer adequate. (Doesn’t seem worth the money to upgrade and add only a single drive)
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      231. I watched this vid and got the Tipton, I can’t work out how to turn down the fan header which seems to run at full whack all the time which is annoying, I don’t see it in the bios only the cpu. Is there another way to control the fan header?
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      232. For a future video, I would be interested to know how that Jonsbo N2 case handles the heat of a 13th gen i3 or i5 or i7. Does it throttle badly? Does it cook the drive underneath?
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      233. I’ve built many computers over the years. For me, assembling the hardware is fairly easy, configuring the software/OS is what will be a challenge for me. I have two old synology NASes and they’re ok. I’m looking to upgrade, so having the option to build a new NAS is a good thing to have. Knowing me, I probably won’t build because the software seems like something I would have to invest time into learning (and I don’t have the time unfortunately). The detailed guide on the website is really good and I will be bookmarking it in case I change my mind.
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      234. Congrats on 100k subs! I also built a NAS/HTPC (with TrueNAS) in this case recently. For the most part, I love it and would absolutely recommend it for DIY NAS/HTPC builds.

        Regarding the not-so-quiet case fan: if your motherboard has an extra fan header, connect the fan to that instead of the drive backplane. The backplane has no speed control and runs it at 100% speed 100% of the time. But hooked into the motherboard you can set the speed in the system’s BIOS. Mine now runs very quietly while still keeping the drives at 30-45°C (depending on load).

        My only gripes with the case are:
        1/ I wish the shank (the unthreaded part) of the bolts for the drive track grommets were longer so that they could be screwed in tightly.
        2/ Why is the dust-catching mesh only on the side grills of the motherboard section but not on the top grill? It should be the opposite since the top is where most air intake will be happening and the sides would be exhaust (or they could have put mesh on all the grills). I removed the mesh from the sides of the motherboard area and hot-glued a mesh to the top.
        3/ Too many different bolt types for the exterior. One part has Phillips thumbscrews, another has small hex flat head bolts, another has Phillips truss head bolts, and still another uses the standard Phillips hex head case bolts. If those hex flat head bolts were Phillips instead, the whole case could be managed with a single Phillips screwdriver. And the truss head bolts could have just been standard case bolts.
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      235. Just to point out the metal thing you call “backplane” is actually called “i/o shield”. There’s a backplane on this case though and that’s the green board on the drive bay where you connect your drivers.

        TrueNAS would’ve worked, although it’d have complained about not enough memory. it would’ve probably been fine though.

        And congrats on 100k subscribers mate.
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      236. Actually great to see this option being shown, between an off the shelf ready to go NAS and a rack mounted NAS (but not everyone has the space for 1U, 2U or even 4U racks). I might go down this route next time.
        If you can find one get the Intel N100 board instead, for a little more money (coz it’s newer) it’s way more powerful then the N5105, I’m running pfSense on the Intel N100 as my router, but I haven’t seen a board only version on Aliexpress yet although the search is terrible, it’s just what I’d do, especially if you wanna run lots of containers or CCTV recording, the N5105 can do that just fine, coz I’m doing it on my QNAP TS–464, just thinking more longer term.
        Robbie, one thing that might be worth testing is PSU orientation and temperatures, I see you put the fan facing inwards, would be interesting to see if temps on the motherboard and in fact drives were higher or lower if the PSU was facing out through the case vents, and thinking about after seeing Gamers Nexus test a Fractal Design mini ITX case, if there’s any sound difference the orientation.
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      237. Robbie, how about a video where you give us a glimpse of your upcoming videos and open the comments to request videos. I watch a lot of your older videos as I tackle new projects and find that many are out of date due to software updates, many need clarification ( I need the Step By Step Guide For Complete Idiots type instruction), and asking questions generally gets no replies from anyone.
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      238. Nice project but some improvements are possible. For example some cable management should be in order in the space behind your fan. As it is now the cables are obstructing the airflow to the Sata backplate. And the airflow is already disputable as it is with such constructions. And by the way: that “backplate” is also known as an i/o shield.
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      239. Great video, exactly what I was looking for.
        I would like to point out a detail that was left out about the total cost, standard low budget PSUs normally have abysmal power efficiency under light load which means that the PSU could even pull double the required wattage from the wall (so, half goes to waste because of inefficiency), over a span of 5y this could add up to a substantial difference in the final price.
        (this is based on the fact that normally a NAS comes with a 12V power supply which is designed for that type of load while a standard PSU for PCs has 3V, 5V and 12V rails and the unit normally has its peak efficiency around 50-65% load)
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      240. I’ve been thinking about building a NAS myself but conflicted with platform. I want storage but also the ability to run a plex server and a small vm or two for system monitoring and other random things.
        Would a topton N6005 board suffice for this or, do I need to go with a ryzen 5700G?
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      241. Great video, and congrats on the 100K although I’m only just finding the channel now. Currently running 3x Buffalo Linkstation units on RAID 1 each and looking for something to increase my capacity/drive use efficiency and this has been a huge help. Any recommended 6x 3.5″ bay cases out there?
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      242. Great Video. I got motivated to build my own NAS, but when I checked out current prices on the recommended parts, I ended up with a $500 shopping cart on Amazon. Bummer. I guess word got out. That’s generally what happens. Still looking to keep the cost to about $250 – $300 . . .
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      243. Does any air actually flow out between the drives? I mean, that’s the point of that case fan right?

        Why would you run the OS from the USB stick? Wouldn’t it be considered better practice to use the nvme or the last sata for a small ssd?
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      244. I may have missed it, but was there a power consumption figure mentioned for this? PSU efficiency is quite important when you’re leaving something running 24/7! I was tempted to build one with a pico itx psu but daisy chaining power connectors is very frowned upon to get the necessary molex/sata connections!
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      245. Nice video, thankyou congratulations to 100k subs. I am horrified by the psu. This thing looks like fire hazard, I would not connect anything to it. Was probably the cheapest shit money could buy.
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      246. Wouldn’t it be better to put the power supply the other way around, so the fan is drawing the air through it’s dedicated grill on the NAS side? Or there was a particular reason to not do that that I haven’t noticed?
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      247. Fun! Wish I had build it like this myself last year, but that motherboard didn’t exist back then. Man, what a beautiful case. Mine is huge.

        Just as you’ve described, both NAS solutions have their ups and downs. I like both. My Asustor has been nice to me. The ones I built are used to back it up.
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      248. Another great video, and congrats on the 100K subs.
        You’re gonna have to do A LOT more content with this new bad boy. Detailed setup, apps, containers etc. Can’t wait for more!!!
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      249. Thank you so mutch @Robbie and eddy for the great videos and geting to 100K you both deserve this and more @NASCompares ps how about a DIY nas with a APU 8 or more cores and 32 gig of ram or 16 gig 6 m.2 0r 6 sata ssd`s and a nic 2.5 or 5 or 10 gig so on you get what i mean then plex test it with a vm and prox mox thanks as ever Kenny
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      250. The sad thing is that buying a modular PSU and short cables, in order not to have to deal with cable management, would cost more than the entire build.

        I really would ike to see a standard to make PC builds as cable-less as possible. Think about HP and lenovo workstations, or the old Mac pro.

        Congrats on the 100K milestone.
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      251. Great video! I’d love you to do a higher spec version of this video and see what you can put together on a £1000 budget. Even if it’s just a demo of what components you’d put together on that budget without the actual build! Would be great!
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      252. It’s not the peace-of-mind that’s worth the difference in price between the home built unit and a, say, Synology unit. It’s the support you get on an off-the-shelf unit and, specifically with Synology, it’s the software suite; DSM and all the wonderful Synology packages.
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      253. So the total cost in cash terms (but not time clearly) would be in the same order as say a TERRAMASTER F4-423 at around £450. So on that basis what does your DIY approach offer over the prebuilt solution? ????????‍♂
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      254. Thanks for the video and congratulations on reaching 100k subs. Definitely a major landmark for any channel.

        I’d be very interested in how this compares to the Storaxa if that ever arrives.
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      255. Congrats!
        You’ve read my thoughts with this DIY NAS. But I had some doubts about noise level of each part (PSU fan, motherboard fan, etc.), then got tired of reading reviews for each potential part of this build… Finaly, I’ve bought terramaster and cleaned up my shopping cart at Ali. )))
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      256. Robbie, thanks a lot for doing this! I have a couple of questions: (#1) About 23:18 you stacked up all the PSU wires (of the DOA PSU) behind the fan intake guard. Are you concerned about the reduced airflow from the cabling obstruction, and if not, why not? (#2) The RMA PSU came without cables, how did you handle that? One last note, your closing comments on being time rich-money poor and the expertise needed to do all of this are GREAT! So many people just forget about all of that and it’s really important to remember. Thanks again for another very informative video.
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      257. Thanks! After being retired for 8 years from IT at a fortune 50 company, I have spent the last 6 weeks watching network and nas videos on YouTube because I got a knee replacement and have lots of time. @Nascompares is one of the better channels and to celebrate thier 100k here’s a tip. If you can afford it, you can too!
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      258. Yeah, Roll-your-own!… Here goes, DSM.7.2 with RedPill on Xeon E3-1226, 16GB Ram, 10 Sata ports (6 active now), two NVME drives) and a Four Port 2.5GB LAN. All for less than that NAS board plus its ram!. Oh, Container Manager in 7.2 is just brilliant!.
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      259. Greetings from Germany. I also discovered your channel a few months ago and subscribed. Congratulations on 100k subscribers. I like to watch your channel and it has also helped me in the decision which NAS I buy and then landed on the Synology DS 920+. Self-build is no longer an option for me. I used to assemble my PC myself, but that’s long gone. The professionals can still better assemble a system than me and it’s enough for me if I then only perform the one or other upgrade.
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      260. Congratulation for you 100k subscribers, well done.
        Just a stupid question. Why did you install the PSU with the fan pointing into the housing instead towards the housing? At least I would have installed it the other way around so that it could freely suck or blow air directly outside…
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      261. I subscribed when there were only a couple thousand subs. I thought to myself that this channel would never break 10K because NAS is such a small market. But here you are, 100K. Congrats!
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      262. Congratulations mate. I’m a recent subscriber, and I don’t watch every video (I mainly skip the ones on low-end NAS’s like the Synology 225X or whatever, as I know I’ll never get those), but you’ve provided great information and even when I feel I have a pretty different lean on a lot of things, I enjoy it nonetheless.

        And here I was expecting the 100K special would be Robbie embarking on The Great Seagull Massacre of 2023. Maybe an idea for 200K!
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      263. Congrats! Pretty soon you can slap a shiny plaque behind you, or maybe make a NAS case out of it!. A channel I run needs just 8k to hit 100k. Man is it slow going once you start watching the subscriber count 😀
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      264. This was fun…nice to see you build that in an hour ????

        Would have been nice to use a faster motherboard with more memory that can handle more complex VM duties… This seems like something you’d find in prebuilts
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      265. Congrats on 100K subscribers.
        Yeah, I can easily see 10+ hours of build time which at any reasonable hourly rate would easily add $200 to $400 dollars unless one was doing it as a learning experience and was extremely cash poor and time abundant (a student or someone laid off in a severe recession). Reminds me of the old Heath Kits for radios and other electronic devices. Even if one would do it once, would one do it twice, let alone half a dozen times? I am still puzzled by the price disparity between a laptop and a NAS. If I go to my local Target department store I can see laptops from an i7 all the way down to a Celeron. A NAS doesn’t have a large screen or a keyboard why does it cost more to manufacture than a laptop? Or the disparity between a NAS and an Apple Mac Mini. A NAS is brain dead, but has lots of storage, while an Apple Mac Mini has lots of processing power, but little storage and needs a “Time Machine” (which Apple no longer manufactures) for backup. Perhaps there is a synergistic setup between an Apple Mac Mini and a NAS. But, unless there is a new Apple product announcement Docker X86 is crippled on Apple Mac Mini with Apple Silicon (M1, M2, etc) and one is dependent on a limited and aging supply of Apple Mac Minis (which are soon going to lack security upgrades).
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      266. I get the budget objectives of this build but personally I’d want a more standardised components setup. Brand name PSU for sure (e.g. seasonic sgx-500 fully modular), a major brand ITX or matx mboard running a recent gen intel (for transcoding ability so no need for gpu) and a matching case to suit either a storage or performance server bias or both. Unraid has the flexibility for sure I have mine on a 12 year old system running backup for other devices as its main function. I was going to throw it out for ewaste otherwise but it got me thinking with the case it was in being about to hold 10 hdds. That’s often the first time you come across unraid when you wonder what do with old hardware after an upgrade.
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      267. congrats on the subs! great video. How high are the heatsinks on the mobo? I have an ye olde HP microserver with nice pro-level drive caddies that I’ve been wondering about updgrading for a while. In the microserver the proprietary size HP Mobo has 30mm high heatsinks, and is squeezed in under the drive bays at the bottom. Do any of the BKHD mobo heatsinks/connectors stick up higher than that? Might work if I can urge the microserver case to develop a new hole for the backplane.
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