Addonics RAID Tower XIII supports up to 20 HDDs

Posted on Thursday, November 03 2011 @ 14:22 CET by Thomas De Maesschalck
Addonics introduced the RAID Tower XIII, a new thirteen 5.25-inch drive bay chassis that supports up to twenty 3.5" HDDs.
Addonics Technologies (www.addonics.com) today announced the RAID Tower XIII, which features thirteen 5.25 inch drive bays in a sturdy and stylish sheet metal chassis that holds up to twenty 3.5 inch hard drives.

The RAID Tower XIII is built on a steel chassis with a stylish front bezel. Each unit comes integrated with a 500 watts power supply and two 120x120 mm low noise high CFM cooling fans for efficient ventilation.

Each set of five drives can be configured as a RAID group. You can connect 20 drives to your system via four eSATA cables, four USB 3.0 cables or a single mini SAS cable. For USB connections, each RAID group can be shared on an LAN by attaching to an optional Addonics NAS adapter.

The Addonics RAID Tower family is perfect for adding external RAID storage or a large number of hard drives without RAID to any system. The RAID Tower XIII is ideal for a wide range of applications that demand large storage volume, such as video storage, data backup, server storage or cloud storage.

There are five different models. Each model comes with everything needed for connecting to the computer. Simply add your hard drives and configure the RAID via either the onboard dip switches or the included Windows software utility and your storage tower is ready to do the work.

One model supports connecting up to twenty 3.5" SATA drives to a computer via four USB 3.0 or four eSATA connections. There is also a model that connects twenty 3.5" SATA drives via a single external mini SAS connection. On models integrated with four Snap-In Disk Arrays, hard drives can be added or removed like tape cartridges from each bay. No special tools needed.

Prices start from $965 for a model with four Snap-In Disk Arrays and four eSATA connections.


About the Author

Thomas De Maesschalck

Thomas has been messing with computer since early childhood and firmly believes the Internet is the best thing since sliced bread. Enjoys playing with new tech, is fascinated by science, and passionate about financial markets. When not behind a computer, he can be found with running shoes on or lifting heavy weights in the weight room.



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