Testing the PiBox mini 2, a Raspberry Pi MicroK8s server

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024

Комментарии • 713

  • @CandyGramForMongo_
    @CandyGramForMongo_ 2 года назад +532

    Props for the “Great Scott” t-shirt.

    • @durikke2
      @durikke2 2 года назад +7

      Was about to type the same xD

    • @applesushi
      @applesushi 2 года назад +3

      Ditto. :D

    • @karlschuneman7960
      @karlschuneman7960 2 года назад +1

      I did shop at the Great Scott! Grocery stores

    • @maxjatka
      @maxjatka 2 года назад

      Yeah, that is cool!

    • @arjayUU
      @arjayUU 2 года назад +1

      Great mutual community 👨‍🔧

  • @devnol
    @devnol 2 года назад +292

    14:50, in this case RAID stands for Redundant Array of Insanely expensive Disks

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +33

      Haha see some people say it stands for "Inexpensive" but I use "Independent" because not all RAIDs use cheap drives!

    • @TricksterRad
      @TricksterRad 2 года назад +7

      @@JeffGeerling Well, the original name in fact used "Inexpensive" for the I in RAID, but later (reference to a book released in 2002) the advisory board replaced it with "Independent", probably because that makes more sense than the former. :D

    • @perwestermark8920
      @perwestermark8920 2 года назад +5

      Inexpensive because it intends small stand-alone disks and not the really, really expensive server disks (disk packs) looking like a big washing machine.
      And just about all disks are inexpensive now, when looking at media price. No longer $1000 for a few MB of storage.

    • @John.0z
      @John.0z 2 года назад +4

      @@perwestermark8920 You saved me from writing that Per.
      One place I worked at had to agonise over the expense of one of those "washing machine" sized drives, a 60MB example.
      Later I laid out the computer room and supervised the installation of a new mainframe that had two strings of such drives, one was 8X100MB, the other 4X200MB, but addressed the same as the first. Mainframe Operating Systems had serious limitations, needed a team to support them, but were reliable.
      Even the 8" SCSI drives that came out later were far from inexpensive, just less expensive. To me a 4TB SATA SSD is far beyond amazing, and the M.2 PCIe SSDs are cheap for what you get.

    • @perwestermark8920
      @perwestermark8920 2 года назад +2

      @@John.0z My first own drive was about $1000 for 42MB MFM drive. Then $1500 for 320MB ESDI drive. $1000 for 1.3GB SCSI. $2000 for 5GB SCSI. Given the capacity increases and inflation, todays SSD and HDD feels like they are almost "for free". I can lose 1TB in a corner somewhere and probably not notice the missed storage capacity from that extra (and forgotten) disk image.

  • @brucecushman3985
    @brucecushman3985 2 года назад +106

    At 6:09, where you show a closeup of the sata chip, if you look at the pads on the chip you can see a solder bridge on two of the pins. This might be intentional or it might be the source of the second sata port failure. Worth investigating as it might be a quick fix to remove the excess solder from the pins. That chip looks like it has way too much solder on it. Good luck with your build. Pre Production boards are always fun. Their like a box of chocolates, you never know what you'll get.

    • @MSM5500
      @MSM5500 2 года назад +12

      Those two pins shorten are the RX differential pair of the second SATA channel of the ASM1061 chip. If the developers deliver their products to public in the state like that, that tells a lot of what's going on behind the scene.
      I didn't get what the developers of this setup are going to achieve especially when ODROID HC4 has been around for 2 years already. HC4 is a high quality piece of gear that has everything on board right out of the box.

    • @mihabolil4o
      @mihabolil4o 2 года назад +3

      I did notice that bridge immediately and wondered if intentional.
      Also got me one old odroid hc2 with omv and it still rocks.

    • @sinki19841984
      @sinki19841984 2 года назад +11

      24 SRXP_A DiI SATA Receive Signal + for Port A
      23 SRXN_A DiI SATA Receive Signal - for Port A
      I don't think those should be bridged...

    • @nicholassmerk
      @nicholassmerk 2 года назад +1

      @@MSM5500 How do you screw that up? wow...

    • @column.01
      @column.01 2 года назад +1

      This. Was about to comment it as I noticed immediately that is probably an issue.

  • @adrianh.5939
    @adrianh.5939 2 года назад +75

    This is an absolutely perfect product for my situation, i need to make a little nas for my parents to use in their house, hope i can get one of these and just set it up in their basement and leave it for forever.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +34

      That's exactly the use case I have for it - stick one at my parents house for a slow off-site backup location.

    • @spencer5051
      @spencer5051 2 года назад +12

      @@JeffGeerling 2x $800 ssd's cheap? Its an interesting product if space is a huge concern, but for the $/TB i'd prob go with something else for a NAS.

    • @ZoomZoomDesign
      @ZoomZoomDesign 2 года назад +5

      It is a perfect raspberry pi project, except the price. Check the Odroid HC4 if you are interested in DIY NAS but in a more decent price.

    • @RobertJBareIII
      @RobertJBareIII 2 года назад +3

      @@spencer5051 I would assume the 8tb SSDs are merely just for this video and more than likely he swapped it out for something else when he actually deployed it

    • @perwestermark8920
      @perwestermark8920 2 года назад +1

      I use a normal RPi4 with external USB3 disks. Works well and are available now for anyone who has the RPi. It's the RPi that is hard to find with all electronics shortages.

  • @derekgoodwine7509
    @derekgoodwine7509 2 года назад +23

    I love your honesty and capability to point out defect and drawbacks nicely I mean without making anyone feel or look bad! Great job! Keep it up Sir!

  • @VakesanM
    @VakesanM 2 года назад +104

    Great shirt btw. just love it when all your favorite edutubers are part of the same multiverse!

  • @gorinator
    @gorinator 2 года назад +14

    I'm glad to see you didn't cover the air vent! I never would have noticed it if you didn't talk about it in your CO2 concentration video. The value you provide to the community with your brain, when it's working, is exceptional. The visual value of the vent cover to the community doesn't seem like a good trade.
    I see it's still hanging up. I think you should dispose of it. Or, at the very least, attach it with some stand-offs so you still get air.
    Keep up the good work, and stay well.

    • @Darkk6969
      @Darkk6969 2 года назад

      I am happy to see he didn't use the vent cover either when he made this video.

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h 2 года назад +3

    There are few things serious missing: 1) metal extrusion case, 2) power toggle and reset switch, 3) RTC battery, 4) easy way to hookup multiple units into common power supply, or PoE out of the box.

  • @joeg3950
    @joeg3950 2 года назад +2

    I’m definitely interested. Going to set this up when out of prototype phase. Great videos. I many not be a computer professional, but I do home setups, networks, etc. as a hobbyist. Rebuilt cars and worked construction as a kid. Now, I no longer want to spend time and effort on the garage floor at 20F in the winter, plus the money. This has been more practical in today’s lifestyle.

  • @misat0san
    @misat0san 2 года назад +2

    Great Scott! What a great channel, great to see you support and follow him!

  • @justinchampion5468
    @justinchampion5468 2 года назад +5

    It's a neat little NAS box, and as a 3D Printing nerd I'd point out that you certainly don't have to run screws into the plastic at all! I use Thermally press-fit inserts a lot, and those provide a secure, repeatable, interface for bolts & screws. Obviously they sent you one already messed up, but If it's a case you imagine taking apart repeatedly, they work great.

  • @ScottPlude
    @ScottPlude 2 года назад +9

    I need to start my own gofundme page to buy my first compute module. There are just too many cool projects that are possible like this one.

  • @Nickle314
    @Nickle314 2 года назад +70

    It suprises me no one does a backbone for mounting lots of vertical compute modules, with no need for power, ethernet because that's all on the backbone. Inbuilt KVM also interesting.

    • @TheXiguazhi
      @TheXiguazhi 2 года назад +4

      its much larger but blade solutions typically work this way....

    • @callmefoxie2950
      @callmefoxie2950 2 года назад +6

      I've had that on a backburner for some time now. Each card in this "blade" would contain either one CM4 plus NVMe slot or four CM4 plus 5port switch; the backplane would be connected via PCIe slot (just using the connector, not actual PCIe pinout) to connect power and UART for KVM; the backplane would have another 8 or 16 port switch to contain 8 or 16 of these sub-cards. And then some ESP32 or something similar with ethernet for the UARTs terminating and some web-UART-HTML5 thingy. I would love to build it but don't have time for it right now

    • @callmefoxie2950
      @callmefoxie2950 2 года назад +4

      we're talking (if 16 ports on the backplane + 5 ports on each sub-card) upto 4*15 = 60 CM4 = 240 ARM64 cores :) would get quite expensive, plus would love to put there dual-PSU or some UPS support as the backplane would supply 12V (because high currents) and each sub-card would switch down to 5V. I've spent some time thinking about this but ... maybe in November or December :)

    • @adameichler
      @adameichler 2 года назад +3

      Turing Pi 2 is not enough?

    • @callmefoxie2950
      @callmefoxie2950 2 года назад +2

      @@adameichler nope, in my case i wanted to go 1U route :)

  • @p_serdiuk
    @p_serdiuk 2 года назад +8

    I've already ordered the PiKVM and this, too, looks pretty interesting.
    Olimex LIME2 A20 is the less powerful but more open source alternative available in Europe. It has native Gigabit Ethernet, SATA, full HDMI, and a battery controller, among other things, and support for Allwinner A20 in mainline kernel is almost complete.

    • @chrismorrison5301
      @chrismorrison5301 2 года назад

      Do the PiKVM and NAS in this video have support for PoE?

    • @p_serdiuk
      @p_serdiuk 2 года назад

      @@chrismorrison5301 Why would they? PiKVM connects directly to the server so it should use the server's power source. PiNAS should sit directly next to the router or switch. Neither is the kind of device you want to place far away and avoid running separate power to.

    • @p_serdiuk
      @p_serdiuk 2 года назад

      @@chrismorrison5301 I'm pretty sure that running PoE with any Pi requires a separate adapter or a HAT. Adapters are cheap.

    • @chrismorrison5301
      @chrismorrison5301 2 года назад

      @@p_serdiuk I thought he said in one of the videos that one does.
      The KVM is going to be hooked up to my home desktop and right now the only feasible place for a NAS is connected to my PoE switch where I would rather use PoE because my plug situation isn't great.

    • @chrismorrison5301
      @chrismorrison5301 2 года назад

      @@p_serdiuk Yes, however some HAT's that do other stuff can come with PoE built in

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber 2 года назад +16

    Great Scott!
    Great channel.

  • @milohoffman274
    @milohoffman274 2 года назад +24

    Sadly the speed is not any better than you would get just adding some external USB3 storage to a regular pi4 in cheap USB3->sata cases.

    • @-morrow
      @-morrow 2 года назад +1

      but it's more reliable/stable since you don't rely on a (cheap) usb-chip

  • @JustinEmlay
    @JustinEmlay 2 года назад

    That insane amount of info came directly out of Jeff's mouth, not from a prompter...legit content!

  • @thorstenkrell6038
    @thorstenkrell6038 2 года назад +9

    Pin12 of U3 is suspicious, 23 and 24 too. I bet, removing the solder bridge between 23 and 24 solves the problem.

    • @miege90
      @miege90 2 года назад

      Had the same thought! :D 06:08

    • @_._.ds._._
      @_._.ds._._ 2 года назад

      I saw the same thing. There is a strange solder bridge between pins. Its very clear at the image.

  • @SeeJayPlayGames
    @SeeJayPlayGames 2 года назад +3

    When you said "if you have to ask..." regarding the price of the SSDs, I had to go look it up. As I suspected. Just under $700. That number range, relating to storage, brought me to a startling realization. My first-ever hard disk on a computer was on my Amiga 500... an 80MB Quantum SCSI drive connected via a TrumpCard 500. That setup was not cheap, and cost over $700 in 1991... fast forward 31 years later, adjust for inflation, and that kind of purchasing power (roughly $1500-1600 depending on how much over $700 it was; I forget) can now buy not one (which would be by itself, 100,000 times the capacity and probably 250-500 times as fast) but *two* Samsung 870 QVO 8TB drives, and possibly the rest of what you see here.

  • @Melechtna
    @Melechtna 2 года назад +33

    This sounds awesome! Too bad my NAS requirements are for full sized drives.

    • @spykillergames8402
      @spykillergames8402 2 года назад +6

      same here id much rather use some cheap WD 3.5" disks sata SSDs belong in my pc for steam use lel

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +22

      Check out pibox.io - longer term they plan on making a 5-bay 3.5" version, and maybe even a 2-bay 3.5" version depending on what people want.

    • @saulo2264
      @saulo2264 2 года назад +8

      @@JeffGeerling 5 bay x 3.5 with raspberry pi and glusterfs video PLEASE

    • @whothefoxcares
      @whothefoxcares 2 года назад

      Did you mean full (room) size storage? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_1400_series

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 2 года назад +2

      @@saulo2264 glusterfs is a cluster filesystem, (i.e. for a multi-node SAN) why are you using it in a single NAS

  • @beauregardslim1914
    @beauregardslim1914 2 года назад +2

    • @paulmaydaynight9925
      @paulmaydaynight9925 2 года назад

      obviously some corp needs to send him an under desk doored rack & lots of trays asap ^_~

  • @jasemkhl217
    @jasemkhl217 2 года назад +7

    I'm in, been waiting for something like this

  • @rhiantaylor3446
    @rhiantaylor3446 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the video. The fact that this device is so attractive reflects that, for all the positives, the lack of a pci pinout (or better a sata port) on the original pi 4 is a fairly big negative.

  • @kcvriess
    @kcvriess 2 года назад

    Specs are NEVER boring.

  • @DaVince21
    @DaVince21 2 года назад +8

    I was starting to look for Pi RAID/NAS/dev server/backup solutions and this looks perfect! It could even host my private Git server. 😄

  • @Kingramze
    @Kingramze 2 года назад +5

    It's really cool. While I'm sure there are a lot of potential uses for it, I'd be much more interested in a Pi based NAS that uses NVME. I'm phasing out all of my HDDs in favor of SSDs, and I'm getting to the point where I'm phasing out my SATA SSDs for NVME (whether internal on the motherboard or a card or external via USB enclosure). At some point, I'm going to have a lot of smaller NVME drives with a lot of life still in them that were just replaced with larger versions, and I might want to put them individually into Pi NAS devices or set up as a RAID with a Gigabit ethernet port - probably as a media server, so the data will be largely write-once, read many.

  • @murraydelk9400
    @murraydelk9400 2 года назад +1

    Wow, I noticed the solder bridge at it’s first appearance and thought “well, that must be intentional I guess” 😂
    Great video, seems like a fitting solution for me and my NAS. 👍

  • @digitalbarrito3555
    @digitalbarrito3555 2 года назад

    I want one of these with a burning passion, and I've never used a Pi, and have only just started toying with the idea of a NAS

    • @digitalbarrito3555
      @digitalbarrito3555 Год назад +1

      I can gladly say that my burning passion will soon be satisfied, getting a PiBox for Christmas! Wooo

  • @burgersquid
    @burgersquid 2 года назад +4

    whoda thunk, the guy who wrote all them ansible roles I use at work is also a great scott fan. I might have to take the plunge on one of these pi things, just to get some decent storage capacity for my plex server.

  • @mdoering
    @mdoering 2 года назад

    I like that "powe" light. It's like "Powe! 🤜💥"

  • @joliver1981
    @joliver1981 2 года назад

    Just what I was literally looking for the other day as I pondered what to do with a couple spare SSD’s I had lying around that were swapped out for bigger drives… they still work fine so now they will get a new life! Thanks!

  • @OneComputerGuyWorking
    @OneComputerGuyWorking 2 года назад +8

    A "Great Scott!" T-shirt! That's also a channel that it's really good!

  • @bopedersen89
    @bopedersen89 2 года назад

    Sorry, late to the party here, and likely SOMEONE in the current 584 comments already said this, but i would be remiss in my duties as a avid nerd, maker, and [relatively] new Pi enthusiast (even managed to get my fingers on a Zero 2 W with now has the horsepower to run the HDR variant of Hyperion!! Ambilight what?? Pfffft! LOL) if i didnt both ask why they didnt use 10 cent threaded inserts, and if you had pushed that info along to Kubesail??
    Thank you for ALL the knowledge you have given this community!
    Your channel RAPIDLY became my go-to resource for all things Pi for good reason!!
    Cheers!!

  • @ryoh8677
    @ryoh8677 2 года назад +9

    This design almost matches the idea I have for a pi nas (that I lack funding and knowledge for). I would rather they put the pcie slot and display connection on the carrier board. Then just create a daughter board as a sata back-plane that connects to pcie slot, this would allow them to create new back-planes for 3+ 2.5 drives or 2+ 3.5 drives when supply becomes available.

  • @pavan13
    @pavan13 2 года назад +1

    After the release of CM4 you really got a lot into the Pi

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +1

      There's just so much more fun things to explore with it; more fun than doing it on a boring old PC, at least.

  • @knomad666
    @knomad666 2 года назад +6

    Great review. It looks promising, and the 5 drive version sounds perfect for a low power NAS! Now if only we could get some TrueNAS Core support...

  • @JasonPatton1980p
    @JasonPatton1980p 2 года назад +1

    I looked up the price for the Evo 870 8tb SSD and...lol your shirt says it all....Awesome video!

  • @To-mos
    @To-mos 2 года назад

    This is the future of personal computing, I can see a world where people have tons of little Kubernetes clusters and the OS is hosted as a microservice.

    • @bluephreakr
      @bluephreakr 2 года назад

      _Eh..._ maybe people need to be introduced with Pis in their daily life first before we go that far. Think washing and drying machines, dishwashers, treadmills, all kinds of personal use electronic appliances. Then people who _may_ be interested in that can use spare Pis to make it happen.
      Too many people are not exposed enough to this idea and are too narrow-minded about it at the moment for that to become true.

    • @To-mos
      @To-mos 2 года назад

      @@bluephreakr It wouldn't be PI's specifically, it would be some kinda pretty all in one package from a huge corporation with simplified instructions and by then it would be as standard as setting up a smartphone, I'm talking 30 maybe 60 years down the road. Currently there are distributed operating systems such as XtreemOS, Grid OS, vStar OS, and Megha OS just to name a few. These are able to fully run Linux applications (and some can also run windows applications) on a micro-service architecture. I've been playing around with XtreemOS at my house for a few months now and It's nice to have a power house available at any crappy laptop. But I suppose you are right if there isn't a market for it, it might as well be a pipe dream. :/

    • @bluephreakr
      @bluephreakr 2 года назад

      @@To-mos I never said it's impossible. But, it might be _impractical_ for most who consider the C drive as the entirety of their hard disk (far from the truth) and people using their PCs as an Internet appliance. It can happen, but you'll be old before it's realized.

  • @shanebenning3846
    @shanebenning3846 2 года назад +2

    Loving that GreatScott! shirt

  • @ty-fighter9969
    @ty-fighter9969 2 года назад +10

    I would love to see some fun stylized cases for this kind of thing. An actual cube shaped setup that looks like a Jedi Holocron would be so cool!

  • @CheapBastard1988
    @CheapBastard1988 2 года назад +7

    I'm personally not a fan of the 2.5" form factor. SSD's are wasted on a pi and 2.5" hard drives don't have very high capacity. A 4x or 5x 3.5" setup with a picoPSU would be most ideal imo. High capacity, small form factor, low power draw and open source. I'm looking forward to the 5x 3.5" version of this kit.

    • @frankies.4500
      @frankies.4500 2 года назад

      I mean it would likely be cheaper to go that route but 16tb is not a small amount of storage.

    • @nicholassmerk
      @nicholassmerk 2 года назад

      I was thinking the same. How do you get a few sata ports AND power a few 3.5" drives? I'm still running a Atom 330 and wondering if I should upgrade yet.

    • @cyberlord64
      @cyberlord64 2 года назад

      yeah but super low power and portability though. 1W per drive (2W at spinnup) and 9W peak for the pi and with 2.5 inch drives at 5TB at ~120$ and you can have a 5TB software raided micro server for a measly 11 watts that you can toss in your backpack and travel with it and power from your battery pack.

  • @ErnestoBarreto
    @ErnestoBarreto 2 года назад +1

    One of the best t-shirt ever !

  • @mldalex
    @mldalex 2 года назад +1

    didn't know you're a great scott! fan. nice!

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +1

      Great channel, many fun projects.

  • @charleshines1553
    @charleshines1553 2 года назад +1

    Those screws that are partly stripped, there may be a way to fix that and still be able to remove them if needed. When a hole in wood is stripped some people stick small bits of wood in the hole to make it tight again. It is not the strongest repair but I have a feeling it would do more than good enough for that. One other thing that may be done is use a thicker screw. Of course the head on it may be bigger (and uglier) unless you know of a specialty fastener store that has them still with the same size head (maybe same color). Some screws even tap their own threads. I wonder if later revisions of that would have brass inserts, that would seem to be the best solution to the problem over all.

  • @AnilArya51
    @AnilArya51 2 года назад +4

    21:12 I wait every time to hear that (" Until next I'm Jeff...) and, please keep it away from Redshirt 🙃

  • @GamingMad101
    @GamingMad101 2 года назад +3

    Would be a pretty neat one to use as a mini dev server

  • @donbot5000
    @donbot5000 2 года назад +6

    Today on" More shit you cant get ahold of ."

  • @NIBricks
    @NIBricks 2 года назад +1

    Loving the "Great Scott" tshirt 👌

  • @dimensional7915
    @dimensional7915 2 года назад +5

    $1699.99 for 2 drives. what a bargain

  • @mechanicallydev4536
    @mechanicallydev4536 2 года назад

    Jeff, 3D printing is not the problem, the design is. If designed correctly you can add threaded metal inserts on the 3D printed parts quite easily, and the inserts are quite cheap (about 4 cents each, even less buying in bulk).

  • @Roobotics
    @Roobotics 2 года назад +3

    6:09 You can see why your drive likely isn't working, what looks to be a differential pair is shorted together at the corner of the IC!

    • @marvingudel605
      @marvingudel605 2 года назад +1

      Was instantly searching the comments, if someone also noticed, when he mentioned one port isn't working.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +1

      yep, that was the issue

  • @user-io1wi5xd6l
    @user-io1wi5xd6l 2 года назад

    Best raspberry ambassador

  • @AnthonyFournier
    @AnthonyFournier 2 года назад

    I'm super excited for it! It's fun the things you learn when you watch the whole video. :) Thanks agin!

  • @dirtyd1398
    @dirtyd1398 Год назад

    AWESOME video! Looks like a great kit, cant wait till Raspberry Pi's are back in stock, somehow, somewhere :)

  • @Viking8888
    @Viking8888 2 года назад +1

    Love the shirt Jeff! Didn't know he sold them.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад

      Yep! And I accidentally ordered two, ordered a small at first for some reason. Luckily I found another person to take that shirt!

  • @RETROMachines
    @RETROMachines 2 года назад

    My life is complete. I can die happy now.

  • @rodolfonetto118
    @rodolfonetto118 2 года назад

    That is actually a PCIe connector but not a PCIe connection. I saw videos of people trying to connect raiser cards to the USB 3.0 port but that is just a USB 3.0 cable that transports PCIe data. USB 3.0, HDMI, DP etc are all data cables and can be used for other applications.

  • @nikitakipriyanov7260
    @nikitakipriyanov7260 2 года назад

    It seems the PCIe x4 connector on the back plane *actually conveys PCIe* , but it works in reverse direction: the thing which is put into the slot is the "host" side, while the slot is the "device" side. Even the power flows in that direction! You can follow the traces on the board and compare to the PCIe slot pinout to see if it's true.

  • @two09
    @two09 2 года назад

    Finally small NAS on Pi

  • @robert12650148
    @robert12650148 2 года назад

    JEFF SALUDOS DE ARGENTINA SOY UN HOMBRE DE 62 Y ME GUSTA MUCHO TU PROGRAMA. EXITOS EN TODO, FAMILIA, TRABAJO Y ESTUDIO Y PROFESION TE MIRO DESDE UNA TABLET QUE TIRARO A LA BASURA AQUI NO SE PUEDE COMPRAR CELULAR NI COMPUTADORA SON MUY CARAS Y COSTOSAS .SALUDOS EXITOS JEFF

  • @CreamPolo
    @CreamPolo 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic! Thank You

  • @nogrend
    @nogrend 2 года назад +10

    6:08 on the IC; is that a solder bridge on pin 23 and 24?

    • @nogrend
      @nogrend 2 года назад +3

      never mind, you discovered it already (20:19)

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +12

      You know I went through the *whole* process of making this video before noticing that. Retouching that pin made it work. #prototypeproblems

    • @expansiongames
      @expansiongames 2 года назад +1

      i did also see that and it looks like its the Sata data lines that are bridged

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 2 года назад

      @@expansiongames better that than bridging data and 12v

  • @bluecreature39
    @bluecreature39 2 года назад

    I learn so much from your videos. I'm such a newb but I think I'm ready to start putting a simple piNAS together

  • @md11199
    @md11199 2 года назад +1

    I love the GreatScoott T shart❤️

  • @chromerims
    @chromerims 2 года назад

    Superb video. 👍 I didn't know about VL805 usb controller on RPi4's pci bus. 3:43. Also I didn't know about sata storage controller ASM1061 tradeoff ( . . . or in the alternative if a desire for both, then the need for a PCI switching chip). It makes sense as one contemplates a line between sbc/iot and desktop platforms. Thank you.

  • @immernochanders776
    @immernochanders776 2 года назад +1

    just a hint. two of the pins on the sata controll chip are shorted. hope this helps. :)
    and this will shurely be the problem with the one sata port not working.

  • @Martin2551
    @Martin2551 2 года назад +1

    I would like to see mount holes on the case. To mount it somewhere, also rubber stand would be cool. Interesting project i love it.

  • @geoffbeidler
    @geoffbeidler 2 года назад +1

    If you're going to drop more than $1400 on drives, you might as well buy a NAS enclosure that comes with a warranty and ongoing support.

  • @shubhamadtp
    @shubhamadtp 2 года назад

    Your t-shirt won't go un-noticed .
    Nicea

  • @BertoldVdb
    @BertoldVdb 2 года назад +1

    At 6:08 you see the SATA bridge chip, two pins are obviously bridged. I see in the rest of the video one port is indeed not working... Maybe try touching the bridge with a soldering iron, it may be enough to fix it :)

  • @autohmae
    @autohmae 2 года назад +1

    Kubesail sound like they are tying to use Kubernetes to implement the FreedomBox, which targeted plug computers in 2010.

  • @EricWAtchesVideos
    @EricWAtchesVideos Год назад

    "Don't ask how much they cost. if you have to ask, it's too much!" LOL

  • @supernenechi
    @supernenechi 2 года назад

    This might just be what I was looking for!

  • @etmindr4328
    @etmindr4328 2 года назад

    the low weight and low power consumption makes it perfect for caravaning !

  • @BVoris6977
    @BVoris6977 2 года назад

    Yeah I saw that bridged solder joint early in the video and was doubtful it was going to work. Their QC needs to take a hard look at this video and the work they are putting out even for PoC and demo units.

  • @markconger8049
    @markconger8049 2 года назад

    I’m getting called away before finishing the video but I wanted to mention if it’s not in the video that the QVO drives are not rated as high as the EVO. This is because the Q uses a less reliable storage chip technology. The warranty length is the giveaway: 5 years on EVO and 3 years on QVO and that is industry standard. The TBW, or terabytes written max is very good on the QVO and I was surprised at that. But Samsung SSDs and NVMes are *the* best by far so if you need the big storage in only one or two drives then QVO is a good choice as long as it’s Samsung. Otherwise, stick with EVO.

  • @stevelaw2000
    @stevelaw2000 2 года назад

    I see you are wearing a Great Scott T-shirt. I watch him too!

  • @phlizneinbleedblop2318
    @phlizneinbleedblop2318 2 года назад

    Can't stop seeing pile of CM4 boards.....

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад +1

      I placed a bunch of day one orders last year from a number of suppliers... the last of those orders finally made it this summer!

  • @punkdigerati
    @punkdigerati 2 года назад +1

    Don't know if it's the problem, but I spotted bridged pins on the SATA controller chip
    Edit:I see you already spotted it

  • @ygiagam
    @ygiagam 2 года назад

    Thank you for another interesting and informative video. Keep up the good work!

  • @bide7603
    @bide7603 2 года назад

    Now Jeff you have peaked my interest...

  • @NewAgeDIY
    @NewAgeDIY 2 года назад

    Wow, $2K Canadian for 16TB SSD.
    Nice setup Jeff 👍🏼

    • @CaioVinicius-nc3cy
      @CaioVinicius-nc3cy 2 года назад +1

      6K in my country. Like Jeff said, if you have to ask, it's too much

  • @marcello4258
    @marcello4258 2 года назад

    cant wait too see similar designs w/ risc V

  • @KameraShy
    @KameraShy 2 года назад +3

    One would think that a vendor would seriously test out any evaluation device before they send it out to RUclips reviewers. If they are sloppy about that, what about what they send out to the rest of us?

    • @SodAlmighty
      @SodAlmighty 2 года назад

      Also, you'd think they would proofread the "Powe" label.
      The case is clearly 3D-printed, and the drives are mounted at a funny angle. Not impressed with the quality control.

  • @CiaranWhelan
    @CiaranWhelan 2 года назад

    Stick a couple of SD card slots on it to backup the SD cards instantly, then they have a massive market. This could be used to digest all photos from the SD card and backup to the cloud as well as the installed SSD drives.

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад

      That's not a bad idea-there are some field boxes that are made for quickly backing up SD cards from cameras, something like this could bring down the price a bit, if you're willing to relax some requirements like being quite as shock proof or moisture resistant.

  • @Jayme
    @Jayme 2 года назад

    If anyone is curious those drives are ~$750 on Amazon(US) right now

  • @perpetualmotion767
    @perpetualmotion767 2 года назад +1

    now we just need a compatible rack mount that can go on a server rack for like 8 of these

  • @stevieklaer9347
    @stevieklaer9347 2 года назад

    Wow this is like exactly what I was looking for!

  • @artursmihelsons415
    @artursmihelsons415 2 года назад

    Pretty cool PiBox..
    Thanks for sharing! 👍

  •  2 года назад

    Worth it already for the extra CM4 board :D

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse 2 года назад +1

    Very neat!
    One gripe that's not aimed specifically at this device: What exactly is wrong with barrel power connectors? I have no issue with USB C in it's proper place but the connector isn't robust enough for long-term use as a power socket and certainly doesn't make a strong enough connection to trust it won't get accidentally unplugged or ripped from it's PCB- really, really important for applications such as this.

    • @Aaku13
      @Aaku13 2 года назад

      barrel connectors aren't standardized on the power delivery side, they don't have a way of negotiating how much power to send like USB does so you can use usb c in both high power to lower power situations without having to change the expensive part the power bricks. usb c is way better, so sick of the floor warts that were barrel chargers

  • @jdmji
    @jdmji 2 года назад

    This is so sick... first time I am actually considering buying something ugh

  • @Trustedcoins
    @Trustedcoins 2 года назад +1

    The only thing they need is to stop using the 1GBE NIC and have at least 5GBE nic to max out the read and write speed of those drives.

  • @Kane-5263
    @Kane-5263 2 года назад

    It is hard to have decided to stop participating in crowdfunded project and encountered a video like that, I see it as already reach it's goal, I hope that you will do a review again upon release to help remind me looking about ordering one!
    Thank you for sharing your opinion about this nice box :)

    • @JeffGeerling
      @JeffGeerling  2 года назад

      You're welcome! And I'm not too surprised the crowdfunding goal has been met, there are a lot of people like me who like the idea of a tiny, quiet NAS.
      I have a lot of faith they'll get the Kickstarter goals met, especially for the models that don't ship with a CM4, since that's the one part of the puzzle that's practically 'unobtanium' for most places right now :(

  • @kris2501100
    @kris2501100 2 года назад +1

    as much as i like this project, i hope they can go 3.5 inch. currently i think almost all 2.5 inch hdds on the market are SMR drives, which isn't that great for file server. This is however totally fine for those who have deep pockets for large sata ssds.

  • @cdp181
    @cdp181 2 года назад +4

    Sometimes you can even buy a CM4

  • @AndrewBeals
    @AndrewBeals 2 года назад

    "Just add a Rπ CM4 module…" let me go out back to gather some hen's teeth to buy it with.

  • @scottwilliams895
    @scottwilliams895 2 года назад

    Cool product, and a great review video!

  • @informARTion
    @informARTion 2 года назад

    haha...just noticed your shirt and haha his intro playes in my head :D greetings. you're amazing! may π be with you ;)

  • @NicMG
    @NicMG 2 года назад

    This project looks great!