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QNAP TL-D800S 8 Bay SATA 6Gbps JBOD Storage Enclosure. PCIe SATA Interface Card (QXP-800eS-A1164) Included

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$599.00

$ 99 .00 $99.00

In Stock

1.Size:4 Bay


2.:Tower


About this item

  • Storage Expansion for your QNAP NAS, Windows, and Ubuntu computers and servers
  • High-Performance Desktop SATA 6Gbps JBOD Storage Enclosure
  • 8 x 3.5-inch SATA 6Gb/s, 3Gb/s (Diskless)
  • 1 x QXP-800eS-A1164 PCIe SATA card
  • 2 x SFF-8088
  • 250W Power Supply Unit
  • Runs QNAP QTS / QTS Hero
  • Includes 2 x Mini SAS Cable (SFF-8644 to SFF-8088)
  • The TL-D800S can only be used as a separate storage pool or volume on your QNAP NAS. It cannot be combined with an existing storage pool/volume.


TL-D800S JBOD storage enclosure allows you to back up and expand your QNAP NAS, Windows® and Ubuntu® computers and servers. The TL-D800S features eight 3.5-inch SATA 6Gb/s drive bays and comes with a QXP PCIe card for connecting the enclosure using a SFF-8088 (or SFF-8644) cable. It provides reliable read/write performance for smooth storage and backup tasks.


yama
Reviewed in Japan on February 20, 2025
全然だめ。PCリブートすると認識しなくなったりする。使えない。
AB
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2025
Can get a bit "rumbly" so put it on a stable surface or on a rubber matt. Otherwise, it's awesome. Use it for my unraid setup.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2024
Bought to expand a 6-year-old NAS TS-453Be. Easy install. Install PCI card into NAS, connect cable, install drives. Upon power on, it was instantly recognized. was able to create storage pool & shared folders as normal using "Storage & Snapshots" in QTS. Installed 2 8TB WD Red Plus Drives configured as JBOD as enclosure will house non-critical heavy read/write storage for Blue Iris security cameras, and Plex OTA TV DVR Recordings. It works seamlessly with my NAS and I couldn't be happier. Works as expected.
Rose
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2024
Missing screwd for the side.
Tom Cameron
Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2023
The QNAP TL-D800S claims to support running on Ubuntu or Windows, connected to a PC rather than to an existing QNAP NAS. But that's only partially true. Linux support is limited to Desktop Ubuntu for the QNAP Manager app, and it can not run on a server without a GUI. There is no command line interface available, and making matters worse the Linux app can not update the JBOD device's firmware. It's not really "linux support" in a meaningful sense if all it's doing is reporting SMART data in a GUI.The unit I received is causing my Debian system to freeze whenever I attempt to write data to any of the disks, so I'm unable to use the device in the first place. The search feature for the knowledge base is incredibly lacking, the forums need to be searched using an advanced google query, and they offer minimal support since most people seem to get frustrated and give up.I'm also pretty disappointed with the quality of the disk trays. The plastic drive retainers are okay at best, but I would NEVER trust them to hold a drive outside of the chassis. Fortunately they ship screws with the accessory kit. But the latch mechanism is very thin plastic, they keys are very thin plastic, the locks I guess are okay for just making sure you don't accidentally pull the latch open? In any even, the latch doesn't have a release button so there isn't anything positively keeping it in place. The tray rails also get bound easily in the tray slots in the chassis, so tilting the front of the drive downward when installing is necessary.The SATA adapter included is pretty low spec as well, and doesn't actually offer enough PCIe lanes for the throughput that the SATA links can support. This won't matter much if you're using HDDs, but if you're installing SSDs, you should probably provide your own SATA/SAS HBA with two SFF-8088 ports.One good point, if I have to give one, is that internally everything is a PCB that is socketed to other PCBs. This means there are no loose data cables inside the chassis getting chafed or otherwise damaged on sharp corners. There's also little or no room for the sockets to come partially unseated in transit, so if your unit actually functions, it's unlikely you'll have to re-seat anything.
Marco
Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2023
Plenty of drive space and it just worked with qnap nas I have.
John R. Hopper
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2020
Best all-in-one miniSAS enclosure. Works with Linux out of the box. Have it installed in my home r630.
barnstormer804
Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2020
After having received this 15 days ago, I've been on a quest for Linux drivers for the TL-D1600S. Without the driver, this product is about as useful as a $1100 doorstop. On the QNAP download site, neither the TL-D1600S nor the included QXP-1600eS HBA card has any downloads at all, let alone drivers (Windows or Linux). I initially contacted QNAP customer support 14 days ago, and they still have not been able to provide suitable drivers. The heart of the HBA card is a Marvell chip; I haven't been able to find (Windows or Linux) drivers from Marvell either.The product website at qnap.com advertises support for Windows, "Linux with Kernel 3.10 ~ 5.0", and "officially supports Ubuntu 18.04.03 (Kernel 5.0)". Despite this, the QNAP download site has absolutely nothing available for the TL-D1600S nor the included QXP-1600eS HBA card. Go to download.qnap.com, choose the product type "NAS / Expansion", then "16 Bays", and see that TL-D1600S is missing from the model list. Similarly, if you choose product type "QXP Expansion Cards", you'll see model QXP-1600eS is missing.After seeing this, I contacted QNAP customer support. (I had to file the ticket under TL-D800C. The TL-D1600S wasn't even available as a support option!) It took them 11 days and two levels of escalation before they finally came back with a steaming pile of driver binaries for ancient (kernel 2.6) versions of RedHat and SUSE distributions, a far cry from the advertised support for kernel 5.0 and Ubuntu!Even more discouraging is that I can't find any drivers (Windows or Linux) for the HBA card's chipset. The QXP-1600eS is based on the Marvell 88SE1475. Marvell's product brief for the 88SE14xx claims to have "Windows and Linux reference drivers" and a "Linux GPL open-source driver", but couldn't find downloads for any of this.After half a month of struggling with this, I've lost patience and I'm returning this glorified doorstop. It's a shame, since I quite liked the physical design. Even if I could get the device working today, this experience does not instill confidence that driver support will be maintained as the Linux kernel evolves.Stay away if you plan to use the TL-D1600S with Linux! You *might* have better luck with Windows, but you'll have to go through support to find drivers, and probably roll the same dice I did. I checked, and the drivers aren't built into Windows 10, either. I can't find any suitable drivers available, for neither Windows nor a modern Linux, from neither QNAP support nor QNAP's website nor Marvell's website.
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