NAS & RAID Calculator

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Synology RAID 0 vs RAID 10 Calculator

Compare usable TB, parity, and failure tolerance between RAID 0 and RAID 10 for Synology NAS users.

Comparison Notes

This page compares RAID 0 and RAID 10 on identical hardware assumptions to help homelab builders choose between capacity efficiency and fault tolerance.

  • Disk size baseline: 8TB drives
  • Reserve policy: 10% filesystem headroom
  • Use the interactive tool for exact real-world constraints
Open Interactive Planner

Storage Capacity Table

Drives RAID 0 RAID 10 Delta
4x 8TB 28.80 TB 14.40 TB +14.40 TB
6x 8TB 43.20 TB 21.60 TB +21.60 TB
8x 8TB 57.60 TB 28.80 TB +28.80 TB
10x 8TB 72.00 TB 36.00 TB +36.00 TB
12x 8TB 86.40 TB 43.20 TB +43.20 TB

Synology Planning Notes

Synology users usually optimize for predictable rebuild behavior and conservative free-space policies, especially when using large-capacity SHR/RAID pools for media and backup workloads.

Brand / Region Glossary

SHR

Synology Hybrid RAID that improves flexibility when mixing drive sizes.

Btrfs Snapshots

Point-in-time snapshots used for rollback and data protection policies.

Storage Pool

Logical disk group where RAID layout is created before volumes are provisioned.

NAS Cluster Guides

Related Long-Tail Calculators

Sequential Long-Tail Navigation

FAQ

Which has more real-world usable available space: RAID 0 or RAID 10?

For Synology users, this NAS planning scenario compares both modes at fixed drive sizes so you can see usable capacity differences before buying disks.

Does this comparison include filesystem reserve?

Yes. The comparison table applies a 10% reserve baseline to reflect realistic operating headroom in NAS and homelab environments.

Can two layouts with similar storage headroom still have very different failure exposure?

Yes. Similar usable TB does not imply similar failure tolerance or rebuild exposure. Capacity and resiliency should be evaluated together.

How should I pick between RAID 0 and RAID 10?

Choose based on your risk tolerance, rebuild window, and performance profile. Higher parity usually lowers capacity but improves resilience.