QNAP has announced its new three-bay NAS designed for SOHO market. The TS-332X also happens to be one of the industry’s first three-bay NASes that integrates a 10 GbE controller, so it should be able to offer rather high network performance for this market segment.
The QNAP TS-332X is based on Annapurna Labs’ Alpine AL-324 SoC (four ARM Cortex-A57 cores clocked at 1.7 GHz) outfitted with 2 or 4 GB of DDR4-2400 memory (upgradeable to 16 GB) as well as 512 MB of flash memory for caching. The NAS can accommodate three hot-swappable 2.5/3.5-inch SATA HDDs as well as three M.2-2280 SATA SSDs. The storage device officially supports hard drive of up to 12 TB capacity, but it is seemingly just a matter of time before QNAP certifies higher-capacity HDDs for this NAS. In the meantime, even three 12 TB hard drives and three 1 TB SSDs already provide a formidable amount of storage space for SOHO environments.
Like other modern NAS from QNAP, the TS-332X runs the company’s QTS 4.3.5 operating system, which supports a range of storage specific features, most notable RAID 5 and virtual JBOD. Other features include Qtier technology, which regularly places frequently used file/data on SSDs, encryption, snapshots, Qsync cross-platform file sharing (for Apple, Windows, and Linux machines), and so on.
One of the key selling points of the QNAP TS-332X is its set of connectivity options. The NAS has two GbE LAN ports, one 10 GbE LAN connector, three USB 3.0 Type-A ports, and one 3.5-mm line-out audio jack. In fact, the TS-332X will probably be one of the industry’s first entry-level NAS with 10 GbE support, which is an evidence that faster wired networks are getting more popular among device makers.
QNAP has already started shipments of the TX-332X with 2 GB and 4 GB of DDR4 memory. MSRPs of the devices are unknown, but their three-bay NAS are usually priced rather reasonably.
QNAP TS-332X Specifications | |||
TS-332X-2G | TS-332X-4G | ||
CPU | Model | Annapurna Labs Alpine AL-324 | |
Cores | four ARM Cortex-A57 cores | ||
Freq. | 1.7 GHz | ||
Encryption Accel. | ? | ||
Memory | Speed | DDR4-2400, single-channel | |
Capacity | 2 GB | 4 GB | |
Bays | 3 × 2.5/3.5 bays | ||
M.2 Slots | 3 × M.2-2280 | ||
Storage interface | SATA 6 Gbps | ||
Ethernet | 2×GbE, 1×10GbE (integrated) | ||
Audio | 1 × audio out | ||
USB | 3 × USB 3.0 Type-A | ||
Other I/O | LEDs, buzzer, etc. | ||
Dimensions | Height | 142 mm | 5.59" | |
Width | 150 mm | 5.9" | ||
Depth | 260.1 mm | 10.24" | ||
PSU | 90 W external | ||
OS | QNAP QTS 4.3.5 | ||
MSRP | ? | ? |
Related Reading:
- Synology 2018 NAS and Wi-Fi Lineup Sneak Peek
- Next-Gen NAS: An Interview with Alex Wang, CEO of Synology America
- QNAP Begins to Ship AMD Ryzen-Based TS-x77 Series NAS: 6, 8, 12 Bays
- QNAP TS-451+ SOHO NAS Review
Source: QNAP
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