The 5C is a well priced 5 bay DAS from the US American manufacturer Drobo. On the inside there is a quad core SoC making sure there is enough processing power and apart from that there is a USB C interface for quick transfers. Drobo is keen on making their DAS as easy to use as possible. One key feature is the possibility to add disk drives of different sizes to an array.
As we already mentioned the 5C from Drobo is a DAS that has been optimized towards eas of use. Therefore you get a sleek looking product offering basic features from the hardware perspective. Apart from that there is Drobo's so called BeyondRAID feature and we're certainly going to have a closer look those goodies. Apparently we wil also have a look at performance, which used to be the achilles heel of Drobo's consumer offerings in the past.
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Preview
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Specifications
Processor |
Quad Core Marvel 78460, 1.2GHz |
HDD Capacity |
up to 5 x 3.5" SATA
II/III
HDD |
HDD Trays |
- 5 x hot-swappable and lockable tray
- carrier- and tool-less
- Drive by indicator lights, capacity gauge, status lights
|
Ports |
1 x USB3.0 Type-C |
LED Indicators |
Yes |
Buttons |
Power Button |
LCD Panel |
Yes |
Dimensions |
262.3(D) x 150.3(W) x
185.4(H) mm |
Weight |
3.9 kg |
Power Supply |
- 150W external power adapter
|
Fan |
1 x 120 mm |
Software and Features
Supported
RAID Type |
|
Software Features |
- Hot Data Caching
- DroboApps
- myDrobo compatible
- Drive Spin Down
- Dim Lights
- OS X Time Machine Support
- Cloud access
|
BeyondRAID Features |
- Thin Provisioning
- Instant Expansion
- Mixed Drive Size Ultilization
- Automatic Pretection Levels
- Single or Dual Disk Redundancy
- Virtual Hot Spare
- Data Aware
- Drive Re-ordering
- 64TB filesystem support
|
Supported OS |
- Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10
- Mac OS X 10.9 and highger
|
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Delivery
- 1 x Drobo 5C
- 1 x Power cord
- 1 x USB cable
- Manual
Inside the 5C bundle you will find everything you to setup the device straight away. The front of the Drobo 5C features a sleek face plate, which is being kept in place by magnets. Taking off the black, plastic face plate gives you access to the five drive bays, which allow for tool-less installation of up to five drives. The front also comes with different LEDs, which indicate the status of each hard drive, inform about malfunction and monitor power.
Turning the Drobo 5C around shows that there is a 120mm fan. The fan is silent but not inaudible. We would love to see a Drobo use a more silent fan, which doesn't have any bearing noise. A closer look at this side of the devices shows one USB port, the power button and one DC IN plugs for the power supply. As far as the hardware is concerned, the Drobo 5C is based on a Marvell 78460 embedded CPU. This particular model features four cores, clocks at 1.2GHz and comes with a built-in 2MB cache. Apart from that manufacturers have the possibility to attach devices via two x4 PCIe 2.0 channels, which means there is a total of eight PCIe 2.0 lanes available. Furthermore the processor supports 16 SERDES lanes, which offer PCI-Express, SGMII, SATA, QSGMII or ETM functionality.
BeyondRAID
In order to understand the advantages and also to a certain extent limitations, one needs to undstand the limitation of RAID arrays. In the case of a normal RAID array all drives need to be of the same capacity. In the example of a RAID1 with one 4TB and one 6TB drive, you will end up with an array capacity of 4TB, wasting 2TB. If you would like to change the RAID mode at a later stage you'll have to destroy the old array, losing all the data on your drives, to then create a new array. Apart from that there is another limitation, which concerns the physical migration of a RAID array. In such an event you would have to make sure that the drives are inserted in the same order the were in the old device, otherwise the array is not being recognized.
BeyondRAID from Drobo offers the possibility to combine drives of different sizes in an array. Depending on the security level you choose, either the loss of one or two drives is protected. If you wish to migrate your array to a new device, you will not have to make sure you're using the same drive order. BeyondRAID is capable of recognizing the array even if the drive order has been changed, which makes upgrading to a new device much easier. Yet another advantage of BeyondRAID is that the protection level can be changed on-the-fly, removing the necessity of destroying the array before switching the protection level.
Regarding limitations of BeyondRAID we have a quick look at how the protection issue is addressed, meaning how much parity data needs to be saved. This depends on the security level you choose. If you decide to enable single-drive-protection then the capacity of the largest drive in the array will be reserved. In the case of dual-disk-protection the capacity of the two largest drives will be reserved. In our case Drobo shipped the 5C with the following drives: 1TB, 2TB, 2TB, 4TB and 6TB. If we choose single-drive-protection then 6TB and in the case of dual-drive-protection 4TB+6TB, 10TB respectively will be reserved.
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Setup
Drobo combined the 5C with a software, which is compatible with PC and Mac. The user interface is simple and straight forward and configuration is as simple as it gets. There are no unecessary features also novice users will find their way through the software quickly. Once you started the software it automatically searches the local network for any Drobo device. Once recognized the status is being displayed. As soon as you start adding hard drives, they're being configured according to the protection level you've chosen. If you decide to add another drive at a later stage it's automatically being recognized and added to the array, while parity data is being generated in the background. Once all drives are configured the software automatically assigns a drive letter to the array and you can now access the 5C via the Windows file explorer. The software is really simple to understand an in combination with the advantages of BeyondRAID the entire device can be set up by novice users without even consulting the manual.
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Test setup
CPU |
Intel Core i7-6700K |
Motherboard |
ASUS Maximus VIII Hero |
RAM |
16 GB |
Graphics card |
Geforce GTX 980 Ti |
SSD |
Toshiba OCZ TR150 - 240GB |
USB Controller |
Intel 1Gbit USB |
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Test Results without Caching SSD
Crystal Disk Mark
ALL 1000MB |
Read MB/s |
Write MB/s |
Seq |
130.4 |
129.8 |
512K |
74.92 |
110.4 |
4K |
1.853 |
3.058 |
4K QD32 |
2.161 |
3.153 |
Power consumption / Noise level
Power consumption |
Idle |
52 Watt |
Load |
69 Watt |
|
less is better |
Noise level |
Idle |
34.2 dBA |
Load |
36.7 dBA |
|
less is better |
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Conclusion
At the price Drobo is asking, the 5C is a versatile and well performing DAS with five drive bays. The hardware used is a good compromise when it comes to a reasonable combination of performance and price. Thanks to BeyondRAID and a software for PC and Mac, this is simply the most user-friendly DAS we've had for testing so far.
If you're looking for an efficient and quick DAS, then the Drobo 5C is simply the DAS, which was the easiest to configure. The BeyondRAID feature is just great, but we still recommend using drives with similar capacities. Like with a conventional RAID array quite some space can be wasted if the capacity differences are large.
The Drobo 5C is listed on Geizhals for about 379 Euro.