Drobo 2 revealed: Dual FireWire 800 ports!
- July 8th, 2008
- 2 Comments

We’ve been over the Drobo a few times, as well a couple of alternatives (I like this one), and I’ve always considered it a good product with one major drawback: it’s only USB 2.0. For people doing video editing or frequently copying super-big files, this meant unacceptable wait times, although for everyone else it was a jolly good backup system.
Well, Data Robotics heard that criticism and is coming out with the Drobo 2nd generation. It’s more of an evolutionary step but that step makes a big difference to who will buy this thing. The major difference is the addition of two FireWire 800 ports. This means you’ll be able to run data on and off this thing at twice the speed you could before (about 50MB/s read and 35MB/s write, comparable to those high-end flash drives). They’ve also done a few more under-the-hood changes, optimizations, and upgraded its processor as well as giving its little butt a new look. It was competitive with the other products at its price range before, but now they’re eating Drobo’s dust. It’s a direct replacement for the old Drobo so the price will be the same. Hit the link for more info and a bigger pic.

2nd gen Drobos should be available immediately, or pretty soon.
The new Drobos will retail for $499, with a 2TB package for $899 and a 4TB package for $1299.
The old Drobos are on their way out, but as long as supplies last you’ll be able to pick one up for $349, or $749 with 2TB and $1075 for 4TB.







OddyOh (Who am I?)
4 months ago
Sweet, a lot of people have been waiting for this. Course, the first complaint will be “wtf, no eSATA?!”. :) Question is, did they improve the electronics inside? The reasoning behind USB only was always the internal parts could never saturate the USB bus, let alone firewire. Hopefully this is no longer true.
Anyway, I’ve owned a Drobo for 8 months or so, no issues, great product! I still have 400GB free. :)
Ben Metcalfe (Who am I?)
4 months ago
Having been in the market for a RAID setup, I ended up buying a unit from niche business-grade RAID array manufacture Synology.
I’m disappointed that this doesn’t have network connection, making it into a NAS (unless you buy their $200 add on, and right now that’s only for USB2.0).
I also feel that at $500 for just the enclosure, it’s a little pricey for my liking. When you factor in that a NAS would require beefier components and CPU the drobo becomes ridiculously over priced.
I know it’s trying to make RAID simple for the home user, but to me that doesn’t justify the hike in the price tag.