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APAC 6x 8TB RAID 5 NAS Calculator

Estimate usable TB, parity, and fault tolerance for APAC homelab buyers using 6x 8TB in RAID 5.

Capacity Snapshot

Raw Capacity

48.00 TB

Usable Capacity

36.00 TB

Fault Tolerance

1 drive

Efficiency

83.3%

Balanced capacity and redundancy, but rebuild stress can be high on large disks. This scenario applies a 10% filesystem reserve.

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Alternative Mode Comparison

Mode Usable Tolerance Efficiency
RAID 5 36.00 TB 1 drive 83.3%
RAID 6 28.80 TB 2 drives 66.7%
RAID 10 21.60 TB 1 drive per mirror pair* 50.0%
RAID-Z1 36.00 TB 1 drive 83.3%
RAID-Z2 28.80 TB 2 drives 66.7%

APAC Buyer Context

APAC builders frequently compare availability windows and procurement variance, which makes robust fallback capacity and staged scaling useful in practice.

Brand / Region Glossary

Procurement Variance

Regional differences in disk availability and replacement lead times.

Spare Strategy

Policy of keeping spare disks available to reduce recovery delay risk.

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FAQ

Should I optimize this 6-drive plan for capacity or resiliency first?

For long-lived NAS pools, resiliency first is usually safer. Capacity can be expanded later, while a risky parity choice can force migration sooner.

How many disk failures can RAID 5 tolerate in this setup?

This setup can tolerate 1 drive. Real-world survivability depends on mirror placement, rebuild stress, and drive health.

Can this calculator replace real-world benchmark and rebuild testing?

No. Use this page for pre-purchase sizing, then validate with workload benchmarks, SMART health policy, and a tested restore plan.

Why include a 10% reserve when planning NAS capacity?

Keeping free space improves filesystem behavior for snapshots, metadata, and write performance. Full arrays often perform worse and rebuild more slowly.