The Natural Philosopher wrote to All <=-
And I think I can confirm that a Pi4 cannot drive three SSDs over USB unaided.
My tentative conclusion, which I would like some opinion on, is that it is the USB power limit that is causing the problems, not the overall power draw. As that would have bee relieved by removing the TV hat.
The Natural Philosopher wrote to All <=-
TNP> And I think I can confirm that a Pi4 cannot drive three SSDs over USB
TNP> unaided.
I found that out a long time ago when I set up my Raspberry PI4 based NAS.
TNP> My tentative conclusion, which I would like some opinion on, is that it
TNP> is the USB power limit that is causing the problems, not the overall
TNP> power draw. As that would have bee relieved by removing the TV hat.
It's the power draw.
On other Pi projects, I used multiple flash drives and had no problems.
But my NAS project used 2.5" SATA drives with SATA-to-USB adapters - which will
certainly draw more power. And I couldn't get more than one to work directly connected. I ended up getting a powered USB hub for all 4 drives in my NAS.
... I tried to drown my sorrows, but they can swim.
___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52
So I am thinking of going to a PI 5 rather than a separately powered USB adapters for the drives - the other way to increase power to the drives.
Or is there a better one board computer alternative?
I want to build everything into a small 19" case with an ethernet switch
board and OSUs to reduce clutter
On 11/05/2024 14:54, Theo wrote:
The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
So I am thinking of going to a PI 5 rather than a separately powered USB >> adapters for the drives - the other way to increase power to the drives. >>
Or is there a better one board computer alternative?
I want to build everything into a small 19" case with an ethernet switch >> board and OSUs to reduce clutter
If you want a Pi5 NAS, this looks like a good option:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l30sADfDiM8
Key part is the Radxa PCIe to 5x SATA HAT: https://arace.tech/products/radxa-penta-sata-hat-up-to-5x-sata-disks-hat-for-raspberry-pi-5
(For 3.5" drives, there are cables so you can mount them away from the board. USB HDD often have a SATA connector inside if you remove the
case)
That may be an option all right - it takes external 12V which I can
probably supply.
And there is one for a Pi 4...
The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
So I am thinking of going to a PI 5 rather than a separately powered USB
adapters for the drives - the other way to increase power to the drives.
Or is there a better one board computer alternative?
I want to build everything into a small 19" case with an ethernet switch
board and OSUs to reduce clutter
If you want a Pi5 NAS, this looks like a good option:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l30sADfDiM8
Key part is the Radxa PCIe to 5x SATA HAT: https://arace.tech/products/radxa-penta-sata-hat-up-to-5x-sata-disks-hat-for-raspberry-pi-5
(For 3.5" drives, there are cables so you can mount them away from the
board. USB HDD often have a SATA connector inside if you remove the
case)
The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
So I am thinking of going to a PI 5 rather than a separately powered USB adapters for the drives - the other way to increase power to the drives.
Or is there a better one board computer alternative?
I want to build everything into a small 19" case with an ethernet switch
board and OSUs to reduce clutter
If you want a Pi5 NAS, this looks like a good option:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l30sADfDiM8
Well it was always going to be a shot in the dark...:-)
And I think I can confirm that a Pi4 cannot drive three SSDs over USB unaided.
As soon as I tried to rsync a new drive as a backup, via NFS, I started
to get disk errors. On unrelated disks...not involved in the transfer.
The PI4 had a TV card on it that gets pretty hot so I removed that to
reduce load on the power supply, but significantly it made *no
difference at all*.
I hooked up a n HDMI screen to monitor the console messages and it was
full of disk errors of one sort or another.
Not necessarily related to the drive in use.
My tentative conclusion, which I would like some opinion on, is that it
is the USB power limit that is causing the problems, not the overall
power draw. As that would have bee relieved by removing the TV hat.
Now as far as I can tell the total USB power available on the PI4
equates to 1200mA.
But on the Pi 5 that increase to 1600mA, provided you tell the board it
has a 'high power supply'.
Fujitsu Esprimo Q556
On 11/05/2024 09:53, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Well it was always going to be a shot in the dark...:-)
And I think I can confirm that a Pi4 cannot drive three SSDs over USB
unaided.
As soon as I tried to rsync a new drive as a backup, via NFS, I
started to get disk errors. On unrelated disks...not involved in the
transfer.
The PI4 had a TV card on it that gets pretty hot so I removed that to
reduce load on the power supply, but significantly it made *no
difference at all*.
I hooked up a n HDMI screen to monitor the console messages and it was
full of disk errors of one sort or another.
Not necessarily related to the drive in use.
My tentative conclusion, which I would like some opinion on, is that
it is the USB power limit that is causing the problems, not the
overall power draw. As that would have bee relieved by removing the TV
hat.
Now as far as I can tell the total USB power available on the PI4
equates to 1200mA.
But on the Pi 5 that increase to 1600mA, provided you tell the board
it has a 'high power supply'.
1600mA isn't that much more than 1200mA. There is quite a difference in
the power requirements of different SSDs. Kingston A400 drives have a
max wattage of about 1.5 watts. Some other SSD drives quote up to 5
watts. NVME drives even more.
So If I were you, I would want to understand the drives you have, know
their power consumption, before making a decision.
FWIW, I only have one USB SSD running off an unpowered cable. The
additional drives use a secondary power supply, but I use spinning HDDs
as well as SSDs, so I needed to.
Also, the Pi 5 is a great computer, so worth buying just for fun. You'll
find something to use it for.
On 11/05/2024 17:57, Chris Green wrote:
Fujitsu Esprimo Q556
Nice idea, but the plan is to reduce box count by integrating everything
into one case, and so I need a small footprint board level device like a Pi.
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