Thecus N4810 review: A cut-price NAS that’s hard to beat
A superb-value four-bay NAS with a few rough edges, this is a great choice for experienced techies
Pros
- Excellent value for money
- Fast
Cons
- Clunky software
- Tricky to set up
Thecus pitches the N4810 as a “high-value NAS” and it’s hard to disagree. This four-bay appliance includes dual Gigabit Ethernet connections, HDMI and DisplayPort video outputs, a quad-core Celeron N3160 processor and 4GB of RAM, yet you can still find it for under £300.
For this reason alone, we are willing to cut the N4810 a certain amount of slack. General build quality is perfectly good, but the design isn’t as stylish or as effective at noise dampening as Synology’s, and the lockable slide-in caddies feel rougher sliding in and out. Also, the pins on the clips that hold the drives in place are tricky to fit into the relevant holes.
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On the plus side, remove the casing and you can easily upgrade the RAM from 4GB to 8GB through a spare SODIMM slot. Meanwhile, there’s a two-line LCD display along with four buttons, allowing you to check systems info and configure basic settings without connecting to the NAS through your browser.
It’s hard to overstate how much Thecus’s firmware has improved with the release of its Thecus OS7, yet there are still some obstacles to get over when setting up the N4810. The Thecus Setup Wizard does little more than find the NAS and configure the network and the admin password, leaving you to type the IP address into the browser to connect to the web-based admin interface. This takes you through more in-depth network setup and RAID configuration, with plenty of options for power users, but intuitive and user-friendly it is not. Once that’s finished, you’re in for a painfully long wait while the NAS builds and verifies the volume, during which you can do absolutely nothing.
In our case, once that was over Windows 10 refused to recognise the NAS or provide access to its folders, forcing us to map a network drive to the IP address before we could get content on or off the shares. Weirdly, turning on link aggregation meant the NAS was lost again – even though we’d maintained the same fixed IP address – until we turned it on and off and rediscovered it in the Thecus Setup Wizard. Thecus can’t really be blamed for this given the woefully unpredictable state of Windows 10 networking, but we didn’t experience this kind of aggravation with any other brand of NAS.
Once up and running, the software is still a little clunky in comparison to Qnap’s or Synology’s – think Linux desktop of ten years ago rather than a modern desktop UI. What’s more, the app lineup isn’t as strong. All the basics of backup, cloud integration, surveillance and media server functionality are well covered, with a choice of OwnCloud or SyncThing for storage and synchronisation, but the virtualisation or desktop computing features of the Asustor and Qnap appliances aren’t in place.
Although we hesitate to mention it, where Thecus does do well is with apps such as Couch Potato, SickBeard and SickRage. These questionable inclusions watch for new movies and TV shows on torrent sites and usenet groups before downloading them automatically. That done, you can then watch them straight from the NAS by installing Kodi.
Thecus N4810 review: Verdict
Ease-of-use is the N4810’s biggest weakness, but if you can live with its foibles there’s a lot of NAS here for the money. It doesn’t cost significantly more than many two-bay appliances but gives you all the RAID and future upgrade options of a serious four-bay NAS, along with the spec to make more demanding applications fly. Performance in our tests was excellent with high sustained read and write speeds over larger files and equally impressive read and write times with smaller files, even while streaming 4K video. It’s not as versatile as its rivals and needs expertise, but if you want a cut-price NAS with room to grow, the N4810 is hard to beat.