I am in the process of upgrading my network server. My current server is basically an old PC with a slight hardware upgrade and a homemade drive caddy to hold 4 x 1TB HDDs. I built this about a year ago to provide some additional network storage. It is mainly used for supporting a hobby (video creation).
I have now reached the stage where drive space is becoming limited so I want to expand. This time I don't really want to down the "bandaid" route of hacking something together that "will do" I want to build a custom solution from the ground up.
I plan to use a 4U server case with support for 15 HDDs. I initially will add 8 x 1TB drives. In a raid 5 configuration, this will allow for approx 7TB of usable storage under raid 5. I will use a small SSD for the system/boot disk that will run Ubuntu Server 20.04 LTS.
The motherboard will be a consumer-level AM4 motherboard running a low-end Ryzen CPU and probably 8 gigs of DDR4 ram. This system will only be used for storage, so will not be doing any heavy lifting or number crunching. I won't even be running GPU because it will be running as a headless server in a backroom.
I will install an 8 port PCIe to SATA adapter for all drives within the raid array. The system disk will simply to plugged into an onboard SATA connection.
From the Western Digital Datasheet...
Average power requirements (W)
12VDC ±10% (A, peak) - 1.75
Read/Write - 4.8
Idle - 3.1
Standby - 0.6
If I take the highest value of 4.8 and round it up to 5 (cautious) the total amp draw will be 45 (5x9) amps...
@12v DC that would be 45x12 = 540 Watts
Allowing for a basic system with this disk array attached I would tend to use a 750 Watt PSU. Most ATX style power supplies come with 2 rails for SATA connections and usually have three connections per rail. How would you connect the drives?
My thinking is to add extenders to both of them to have 5 connections on one cable (one going to system SSD) and 4 on the other. The big question is can a single SATA power rail safely and reliably offer around 270 Watts?
There is also the question of power-up. Do disks tend to draw more amps when they spool up at the system start?
I have emailed a few manufacturers and am still waiting for a reply. Datasheets tend to provide total amps and wattage and not per specific rail or line.
Any input would be very much appreciated, specifically from anyone who has done something similar.
Mack.