NAS & RAID Calculator

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Region Focus · US

US RAID-Z2 vs RAID-Z1 Calculator

Compare usable TB, parity, and failure tolerance between RAID-Z2 and RAID-Z1 for US homelab setups.

Comparison Notes

This page compares RAID-Z2 and RAID-Z1 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-Z2 RAID-Z1 Delta
4x 8TB 14.40 TB 21.60 TB -7.20 TB
6x 8TB 28.80 TB 36.00 TB -7.20 TB
8x 8TB 43.20 TB 50.40 TB -7.20 TB
10x 8TB 57.60 TB 64.80 TB -7.20 TB
12x 8TB 72.00 TB 79.20 TB -7.20 TB

US Buyer Context

US buyers often evaluate frequent pricing swings and promo cycles. Capacity planning should account for staged purchases instead of one-time all-disk upgrades.

Brand / Region Glossary

Cost-per-Usable-TB

Planning metric that compares real usable capacity after reserve and parity.

Promo Window

Seasonal pricing period used for phased drive purchasing strategies.

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Related Long-Tail Calculators

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FAQ

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.

Which option is usually better for long-term homelab growth?

The better option is the one that keeps acceptable usable capacity while preserving safety margins during future disk expansions.

Which has more effective capacity: RAID-Z2 or RAID-Z1?

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

Does RAID-Z2 rebuild faster than RAID-Z1?

Rebuild behavior depends on array width, disk size, and workload pressure. This page focuses on capacity and tolerance; benchmark your actual platform before final choice.