Home / Channel / General Tech / Synology launches 60-bay HD6500 NAS for petabyte-level storage

Synology launches 60-bay HD6500 NAS for petabyte-level storage

Today is a big day for Synology, with the company announcing availability of the HD6500. This is the first product in the HD series, offering 60 bays for super-sized storage needs, and support for up to 960TB per chassis. 

The Synology HD6500 is a 4U 60-bay system for petabyte-level storage, and can be paired with up to 4 additional 60-bay expansion units to increase storage further. In terms of speeds, you'll be looking at up to 6688MB/s sequential read and 6662MB/s sequential write speeds, making it a suitable solution for dealing with large-scale data, whether its for long-term storage and archival needs, video surveillance backups or enterprise-wide office backups. With two 10GbE RJ-45 ports, three Gigabit Ethernet ports, and the ability to expand up to 10 additional 10GbE SFP+/RJ-45 and 25GbE SFP28, or Fibre Channel ports, the HD6500 is equipped to scale with business demands.

Designed specifically for use with Synology HAS5300 SAS HDDs, the HD6500's storage controllers, firmware, and operating system have been optimized and validated for long-term reliability and data integrity. The inclusion of dual power supplies, SAS multipathing support, out-of-band management support, and dual independent system drives provide redundancy to ensure consistent and dependable data and service availability.

The Synology HD6500 is available starting today through Synology's solution partners and channel networks. You can find more information, HERE.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru Says: Do many of you use Synology gear at home or at work? 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Leo Says 77 – Intel ‘fesses up about Arrow Lake Core Ultra 200S

The launch of the new Intel Core Ultra 200S family of CPUs along with Z890 motherboards was a thorny process. KitGuru suffered along with pretty much every other review site on the planet and you may have noticed we held off from reviewing of the Core Ultra 9 285K, Core Ultra 7 265K and Core Ultra 5 245K as it is clear to us that Intel has some work to do before this platform is ready for action.