Drobo Pro Announced!
I’m a huge fan of the massive (but slow) bulk storage devices made by Drobo. I own two of the Data Robotics Drobos. They’ll save you from losing data if a single drive fails, and a single enclosure can hold 4 drives for up to 8TB of storage. Sure, they’re relatively slow compared to a single drive, RAID, or an SSD, but they’re perfect for an external hard drive for home storage.
And now they’ve upped the ante with the Drobo Pro, an 8-bay enterprise version of the Drobo.

There’s a new “Dual Disk Redundancy” option will spread the data out such that the Drobo Pro array can suffer two simultaneous drive failures without any loss of data or interrupted service. You can even toggle this option on and off without having to rebuild the array. There’s also new connectivity via gigabit ethernet (iSCSI) as well as the older FireWire 800 and USB 2.0 ports. Linux, Windows, and Mac are supported, on NTFS, HFS Plus, EXT3 and FAT32. For more details, check out the data sheet.
You can buy one now for $1,300 from the Drobo store, or $900 if you exchange two old drobos for the new shiny model, something I’m horribly tempted to do right now.
| This entry was posted on Tuesday, April 7th, 2009 at 7:57 pm and is tagged with disk redundancy, external hard drive, dual disk, bulk storage, drive raid, home storage, drive failures, enterprise version, drobo, storage devices, ext3, iscsi, fat32, hfs, ssd, data sheet, robotics, connectivity, usb 2, array. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback. |
3 Responses to “Drobo Pro Announced!”
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I specially like that is rack mountable for those of you that wants to mounted along with your server.
Yeah, just not sure how fast they’d be in a rack. At that point, you might as well buy enterprise storage.
I just got one of these and hooking it up to iscsi on vista was a pain because I have live onecare installed. I still haven’t figured out how to get it to work without disabling the onecare firewall.
As for perfromance:
With 4 1TB drives intalled, it had
minimum of 4.9mb/sec
Max of 57.2mb/sec
average of 35.1mb/sec
It had to be one of the ugliest charts i’ve ever seen. Expected alot more from iscsi (with the firewall turned off)