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Synology CubeStation 4-Bay (Diskless) Network Attached Storage CS407ÿ (White)

Synology CubeStation 4-Bay (Diskless) Network Attached Storage CS407ÿ (White)
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Synology CubeStation 4-Bay (Diskless) Network Attached Storage CS407ÿ (White)

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Description:

CS407 is designed with Windows ADS authentication, USB printer sharing, dynamic website hosting, and data backup. With terabyte competency and hi-performance file sharing, CS407 gives business users the freedom to store massive data efficiently. The RAID 1/5 protection further prevents data loss from inevitable disaster.

Features:
  • Form Factor - 4-Bay Enclosure

  • Maximum Storage - 4TB

  • Hard Drive - SATAII

  • Network Speed - 10/100/1000 Mbps

  • - External HDD Interface: USB 2.0 port X2

Product Details:
Product Width: 18.4 centimeters
Product Height: 23.0 centimeters
Product Weight: 2.23 Kilograms
Package Length: 12.0 inches
Package Width: 9.7 inches
Package Height: 9.0 inches
Package Weight: 9.0 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 6 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 6 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 9 found the following review helpful:

5Great product , great support !  Apr 29, 2009
By LKR "LKR"
Just wanted to report wonderful experience I had with Synology support.

Almost 2 years ago I bought CS-407 NAS put in it 4x1TB drives and created RAID 5 array.

About two weeks ago one of the HDDs "died" - [Please control your language] happens :) that's why we have RAID 5 ,right ? Well it's correct unless you connect SATA cables after replacing the broken hard drive to the wrong drives as I did :(
First I did not noticed it but when system started and reported "volume crashed" (crashed not "degraded") I pretty soon "noticed" it and connected everything back , however damage was already done - disk was marked as "wrong" and about 2TB of data was lost :(

Hoping that data is still "somewhere there" I contacted the Synology and get the list of instructions on how to forward the ports and setup other things so [b]their technician will be able to connect and fix" ! WOW !!

I did so and the connected, they said that they in addition to my problem see some problem with SATA cables so they ON THEIR own and FREE shipped me full set of cables (and it's almost after two years since I bought the NAS) !
After I recieved the cables and replaced them they connected again and rescued all my data !

So I way WOW - that was the level of support everyone should have and that was the level of support I had never seen so far.

So I am posting this as a "thank you" to Synology - they cost more but they do much more :)

8 of 9 found the following review helpful:

4Great media server and backup for peace of mind  May 05, 2008
By JB Shmults
I finally bought the Synology CubeStation after doing a lot of research and deciding that I don't want any of the NAS that have tons of negative reviews posted, mostly for non-existing service and high failure rates. The 407 is expensive, but I have too many irreplaceable photos and a very large music collection to loose any of it. I run a RAID on my main workstation, but have no security on the other PCs. I ran a Maxtor 300GB shared drive for 2 years, but it occasionally hangs up, is slow and data are lost if the drive croaks.

The Synology is very easy to set up, has a great design, drives run very cool, very quiet operation and so far no problems at all. Took me 20 min to set up, all night for drive check and another 10 hours for the first 300 GB backup of all PCs in the house. Also, the Synology is not limited to 1 or 2 GB, you can fully load it with 4x 750GB. I am running it with three 500GB drives with 32mb cache in a RAID 5 configuration (redundancy built-in, you get about 2/3 of the nominal disk space, ~940GB in my case). Very nice web AJAX interface. Highly recommended! I wanted to be future-proof for as long as possible and opted to pay the extra $100 to get the black 407 instead of the 407e, which has a slower processor, but otherwise, they are identical in functionality.

Cons: Inserting or exchanging drives is a little too cumbersome, with access from the back and all cables in the way. There are other solutions, which provide front access and slick drive bays (DROBO, HP Mediasmart). Also, hot-swap would be a nice touch, although I hope to never have to use it! And, of course, this is too pricey for the mainstream. Backup software is too limited, doesn't allow to save multiple schedules / backup schemes.

The box looks better in a real office and is smaller than it appears in ads. This is a great solution for home or small business and for those people who are willing to pay for peace of mind and a real backup solution. Make sure to upgrade the firmware first thing, it is substantially more usable and powerful than what comes in the box!

Additional comments:
Almost 3 years later, I am still very happy about this solution! Reliability of the system is excellent (data reliability, of course, depends on that of your drives). I have had no issues at all and only occasionally clean the front grills with a dust blower to keep the drives cool. This little device even emails me when it restarts after a power out! Firmware is very actively updated and always adds useful features, upgrading is very easy to do. Very highly recommended, great device.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

5Love it love it love it  May 15, 2009
By John Wei
I've had this NAS for almost a year now and love it. I use it to store my entire iTunes library, all my videos and photos, and as a webserver to share all my photos.

It has a built-in iTunes server, but it's more clever to set it up as a network shared drive. For each of the client PCs, you can use "net use" with the /savecred and /persistent:yes flags to save the NAS login and password. Then modify the iTunes XML files to point to the network drive, and voila, each computer thinks it owns the iTunes library locally. Playlists and DRM should share happily.

The photo webserver is pretty slick, auto-thumbnails, and has a very clean interface. I have it set so that new folders automatically become public, so as soon as I save an image to my network drive, it's auto-shared. No need for extra steps to post to Flickr or Picassa or whatever. New sub-folders in private folders are never made public, so that's where I put pictures that I don't want shared. Or, it's super easy to tweak each directory's permissions. I use dyndns.org (one of the default supported services) to manage the public IP address, but I do have to manually go in and refresh it every couple of weeks when my ISP resets it. There may be an automatic solution for this, but haven't tried that hard.

The last thing to note is that you should read the Synology forums carefully. Not all hard drives will work nicely with this. I wanted 1 TB drives, and at the time there was only 1 Seagate drive that was fully functional. That's not the greatest thing if you're depending on the RAS functionality. If you have all identical drives in your array, that significantly increases the odds that you'll have more than one drive failure at the same time, if it's due to a manufacturing defect. Should still be a rare occurrence, but something to be aware of.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4Synology CS407 - Great multi-terabyte storage system that will not break your wallet  Mar 07, 2009
By Mark Corsi
The CS407 has lived up to all of its claims! This was a replacement for a LaCie unit we had purchased 4 weeks before. The LaCie offered more 'bang for the buck' (5 hot swappable 1G drives for less of a sticker price than the CS407 w/ 4 internal cold swap drives), but it simply could not perform windows authentication. When I contacted LaCie I was told that problem was a 'bug' in their system and they could not help me. Since integration with a windows network was one of their selling points, you could imagine my frustration.

The CS407 on the other hand (with 4 1T drives bought separately) cost approximately 20% more than the LaCie, but right away I found it to be a more professional solution. The web based setup is intuitive. There were a couple of things I needed to do to the Windows 2003 domain controller in order to get all the Windows XP machines to authenticate correctly against the NAS (Windows Vista worked right out of the box), but the email support turned my questions around quickly hand had me up and running.

I heartily recommend this device if you are looking for an inexpensive multi-terra byte storage/backup unit for your business.

Regards,

Mark Corsi
The Spear Report

5Synology Cubestation 4-bay  Jul 31, 2011
By M. Stokman
Bought this unit over 30 months ago with a APC backup and no problem with the box at all for our small office of 8 folks. Originally bought with 4 - 500 Meg drives and the cube is running great! Had one of the drives fail but the cube itself no issues. Easy to install and we use Memeo autosync to backup our laptops for each person with their own segmented drive space and also use the Synology cube as a share drive for all folks. So since it's expandable to 4 TB we have plenty of room to grow as we add people. Also since they can be linked in series, just add another box.Synology CubeStation 4-Bay (Diskless) Network Attached Storage CS407ÿ (White)

I was so impressed by the unit, I bought the 2 drive system, 210J, for my home to back up our files, photo's and music with 2 TB drives as did one of my co-workers. Units are extremely quiet and dependable.Synology DiskStation 2-Bay (Diskless) Network Attached Storage DS211J (White)

See all 6 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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