QNAP TS-209 Pro NAS

By Alex Kidman on 07 January 2008

QNAP's TS-209 Pro offers a compelling mix of server functionality and straight-up NAS backup options.

8.8 6.8
  • Good: RAID Support • Good Web interface • Supports UPnP, PHP, Server functions
  • Bad: Poor Mac OS support • Comparatively expensive
  • Specs: Windows, OSX, Linux • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$539.00

Design
In the consumer/SOHO space, there's two prevailing theories on how to build a NAS. On the one hand, there are NAS units that come fully packed, built and sealed in, and these tend to be aesthetically more pleasant units -- we're thinking of manufacturers such as Iomega and Seagate here. On the other hand, there are the tinkerer units, which look more towards the enterprise/network box style of design. QNAP's TS-209 Pro is such a beast; when you first unpack it from the box it doesn't even have a front faceplate attached, instead greeting you with lots of bare (and somewhat sharp) metal. It's a BYOD (Bring Your Own Disk) NAS that utilises two SATA drive bays. For review purposes, we were provided with two Western Digital 500GB SATA drives; QNAP offers a list of compatible tested drives. The first task in setting up the TS-209 Pro is thus one of installing drives, which may panic some novice hardware builders. While the quick set-up sheet is a multi-lingual affair, which is usually bad news in terms of comprehension, QNAP redeems itself by offering excellent diagrams of every step. Even the most timid of tinkerers would have a hard time of getting the installation wrong, and everything except a screwdriver is provided in the box for you. Once the drives are installed, it's simply a matter of screwing in the front faceplate -- this could be optional if you wanted quick drive access and easily sliced fingers when you get it wrong -- and connecting the unit up to your network and a power supply. The rest of the installation is handled via a quick software utility that sniffs out the TS-209 Pro's IP address, and from there the installation is a purely web-based affair.

Features
Aside from acting as a basic NAS appliance, the TS-209 Pro also has a lot of functions that you'd normally associate with a dedicated server appliance. Backup is an obvious utility, with simple Windows backup software provided, but beyond that, the TS-209 Pro also offers FTP, Web, MySQL, Print, UPnP, iTunes and Photo server functions. Whether you're installing it in a small business, or just as a home backup server, there's bound to be something that the TS-209 Pro can do for you. On the often-shadier side of legal, it'll even act as its own BitTorrent download client remotely, although the functionality of this is less impressive than it sounds, as it doesn't support proper scheduling, and most PC-based BT clients outshine it.

On a hardware front, the TS-209 Pro runs on a 500Mhz processor with 128MB of internal RAM. There's a single Gigabit Ethernet port on the back, along with USB ports on the back for printer sharing and a USB port on the front for attaching other USB storage devices. There's a dedicated one-touch copy button on the front of the TS-209 Pro for quickly dumping the contents of a USB drive to the TS-209 Pro. Alternatively, it can be used if you're very cautious about the contents of the installed drives as an adjunct to the TS-209 Pro's RAID 1 Mirroring capability. Raid 0 is also supported for striping drives to gain extra storage space across a single drive.

Performance
As mentioned, setting up the TS-209 Pro was pleasantly simple for the most part, apart from one minor, OS X Leopard-centric quirk we hit. For whatever reason, the supplied Mac software wouldn't set the date on the TS-209 Pro properly, and this caused the setup wizard to stall. We also encountered some problems copying files and then seeing them properly, and a quick look at QNAP's discussion forums reveals plenty of other Mac users in the same kind of trouble. For what it's worth, a firmware update fixed the majority of our Mac problems, but it was noticeable that Windows performance was much better throughout our testing period.

In terms of raw throughput, the TS-209 Pro performed very well across multiple network connections. Data rates may vary depending on the speed and quality of your connection and drives, but we managed a comfortable 10MB/sec over a direct connection copying files from various sources. Switching over to 10/100 and WiFi dropped these speeds markedly, and those looking to do a full backup of their systems will understandably need to schedule such activities over a number of hours.

The TS-209 Pro isn't a massively cheap NAS solution, especially when you take into consideration the fact that it ships sans any kind of drive. Still, its additional functionality, which covers everything from PS3/Xbox 360 media streaming through to dedicated web serving do place it nicely ahead of the BYOD pack.

Topics: nas, qnap, pro, TS-209, drive, there, unit

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Comments (5)

  • Josh gave 10/10 on 01/03/2009 04:15 Report abuse

    Does what it says with loads of features.

    Spindown issues are related to the drives you put in it.
    Note; most Seagate 7200.11 drives have firmware issues and this batch have huge amounts of DOA's esp the 1.5Tbs - check newegg comments.

    Western Digital standard drives are not RAID compatible so fork out for the RE versions if you want them to play nice.

    • Good: Aesthetic.
      Solid.
    • Bad: Give me more throughput for RAID1.
      Put in a wireless adapter.
  • vp gave 8/10 on 27/11/2008 11:40 Report abuse

    works well as advertised. A bit slow over FastE, mirrored drives. Setup was painless got me working in less than 5 mins (minus time it took to initialize my HD's

    No difference between Pro and Non-Pro versions, I just flash the firmware and have a Pro. Many of the features of the Pro are present in the cheaper version, just disabled

    • Good: Excellent feature set
      Large Community
      QPKG enables installation of many third party software.

      Stays cool even after sustained writes of several hours.
    • Bad: Full featured but still pricey. No eSata connection in the back
      No usb storage option to directly connect to a PC.

      If you install the SABnzbd software, be prepared to have the cpu pinned on this NAS as long as it is running in the background
  • billsunt gave 2/10 on 22/10/2008 06:45 Report abuse

    Just bought a TS-109 Pro and you have to use the included app to "initialise" it. Unfortunately the software just won't work for me and it seems to be quite common from the forums. QNAP support are of no help as well, they simply suggest using a different computer. By the way its not possible to set it up from a Linux PC, even though they claim full Linux support.

  • petur gave 4/10 on 09/07/2008 19:04 Report abuse

    I recently got one of these and I already regret it. It seems QNAP is focusing on adding new features and fancy stuff, and leaving core NAS bugs unsolved.

    My main complaint is creating a backup of the NAS. I tried remote replication and copy to USB disk, and both are horribly SLOW and fail in the end.

    Also, the disk spindown feature does not work at all!

    I'd suggest going for a brand that doesn't have all the fancy stuff but functions correctly as NAS.

    I tried to get support via the forum but they don't even respond to my complaints.

    • Good: - nice design
      - good build quality
    • Bad: - buggy firmware: backup to USB not working
      - buggy firmware: disk spindown not working
      - noisy and hard to tweak noise down
      - expensive!
      - slow support
  • Ron gave 10/10 on 11/01/2008 19:48 Report abuse

    It's pretty nice NAS with a lot of feature. Especially if you want to share the multimedia files through PS3.

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