Miscellaneous Aspects and Concluding Remarks

The single 120mm fan is a reasonable solution to balance the need to cool down five SATA hard drives while also maintaining an acceptable noise profile. We noticed many reviews online indicating fan noise to be an issue in the Drobo 5D. However, we had no such issues with our review unit.

One of the advantages of the Drobo 5D / BeyondRAID is that users can start off with just a single drive in the unit, and add more drives down the line. The RAID expansion / migration process is seamless and without data loss. The progress of this process can be monitored with the Drobo Dashboard. Similar to our NAS reviews, we first started off with one 2TB drive in the unit, and added a second one after some time. Since the unit was configured in single-disk redundancy mode, the unit took some time to ensure that the second disk could act as a protection disk. However, due to the nature of BeyondRAID, the addition of new disks (3 through 5) resulted in immediate expansion of usable capacity. We also tested out moving to a dual-disk redundancy configuration once the five disks were in the unit. This took some time similar to the shift from one disk to two disks inside the unit. The power consumption of the unit was also tracked in the course of this evaluation routine. The numbers are summarized in the table below. These numbers are without a mSATA drive in the cache acceleration bay.

Drobo 5D - BeyondRAID Migration and Expansion
Operation Time (hh:mm:ss) Power Consumption
BeyondRAID SDR (1D) - 22.97 W
BeyondRAID SDR (1D to 2D) 01:08:52 30.96 W
BeyondRAID SDR (2D to 3D) - 38.15 W
BeyondRAID SDR (3D to 4D) - 44.37 W
BeyondRAID SDR (4D to 5D) - 51.48 W
BeyondRAID SDR (5D) to DDR (5D) 00:38:32 50.79 W

Coming to the business end of the review, we must first give credit to Drobo for creating a really simple and easy-to-use product for the average consumer. The whole operation (from installing drives, to actually mounting the volumes on a computer) is very easy, and can be managed even by folks who are not particularly adept with computers. The mSATA SSD acceleration is very helpful for multimedia editing directly off the Drobo 5D, particularly for read operations. The effectiveness was brought out by using real-world storage benchmark traces from Photoshop and similar programs. The dual-disk redundancy configuration benefits more from the SSD acceleration compared to the single-disk redundancy configuration.

There are a few points that could help Drobo expand the reach of units such as the Drobo 5D:

  • Thunderbolt support in Windows (if not for the 5D, at least for future products which integrate Thunderbolt support)
  • Support for data recovery by the end-user

To expand upon our second suggestion, it is well known that disks making up RAID volumes in commercial off-the-shelf NAS units can be mounted on a PC to access the data. We would like Drobo to provide a software program that can mount Drobo volumes if the disks used in a Drobo device were to be connected directly to a PC. This would go a long way in clearing the air of distrust that many tech-savvy consumers have when considering proprietary data protection schemes like BeyondRAID.

The Drobo 5D is currently available on Amazon for $615. The price is not a surprise, given that the product's features (Thunderbolt support) and operation make it attractive to people in the Apple ecosystem. As a Thunderbolt / USB 3.0 device with a novel and easy-to-use data protection scheme, the pricing is reasonable. However, from the viewpoint of a PC user, it is just a USB 3.0 device. There are many hardware RAID solutions with a USB 3.0 port that provide much better performance. But, there is definitely a segment of the market that doesn't mind paying a premium for Drobo's simplicity and 'it just works' aspects.

Direct-Attached Storage Performance
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  • Mgamerz - Thursday, May 5, 2016 - link

    I have a Drobo 5D, had it for a few years now. It's not really worth it IMO. Here's why:

    1) The thing is damn slow. While windows asks a sleeping drobo to wake up, sometimes it can lock the entire system up as it waits for a response. Since this thing has 5 disks thats like 20 seconds, and it happens multiple times a day. And I only use it for storage, I don't actively use it. I can get like 70MB/s out of it.

    2) You can't get data off if it dies. And I've had mine crap out once in less than 3 years of ownership where it dropped some piece of data, and windows could no longer read the filesystem.

    3) If you use Windows Image Backup to it, it apparently causes issues with the system booting. I have mine (8TB configuration) and I cannot boot my laptop with it plugged into my Dell Docking Station. I have to push power, pop my machine off the dock, wait for it to finish UEFI boot, then put it back on, or it just locks up. This may not be the fault of the drobo (I see it at home with a 4TB drive, but they're both GPT/UEFI setups...) but its really inconvenient.

    For the price of this (and the fact that once the warranty goes out you can't even get repair service done!) it's not worth it at all. It's fancy, but its not useful fancy.
  • devildahusky - Saturday, May 7, 2016 - link

    I had a Drobo once. It deleted all my data and the company refused to provide recovery or acknowledge a problem with the device. Money well wasted.
  • aj654987 - Thursday, May 12, 2016 - link

    This "review" reads like an advertisement. $600 for this thing and nowhere does the review compare it to its competitors or tell me why I should buy this thing over a Qnap device. Anandtech was so much better when they were independent.
  • CalaverasGrande - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    I have a Drobo I use for my photos and misc stuff. It has been rock solid for the last couple years. It is slow as hell, and I'd really resent the unit if I hadn't gotten a great price on it. Honestly I only picked it up because of the deal, and all the NAS I looked at had too many gimmicky features I didn't care for.
    Recently replaced it with an OWC Thunderbay 4. MUCH faster.

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