this post was submitted on 09 Aug 2025
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Hi all, a few months ago I got started with selfhosting. Installed Ubuntu Server on a HP EliteDesk 705 G3 Mini. It's been great, running Jellyfin, Tandoor, Calibre-Web, and Miniflux. Everything is local access only.

The machine came with 1TB SSD and currently about 80% of that is taken. I've been searching around for good options to expand. While I'm relatively comfortable on the software side of things, I'm very inexperienced with and somewhat intimidated by hardware (but would love to learn a bit more).

What would be the most prudent way to expand storage? Is it simply replacing the existing SSD? Should I think of adding a NAS instead?

Buying new hardware would be ok, my only hard requirement is that I don't want to run proprietary software/OS.

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[–] lavendertea@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

I've considered this as well, as I already back my data up regularly. However, I read online that external disks aren't good for long-term access. Have you run into any issues with that?

[–] Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe 3 points 3 days ago

External failure rates are hit and miss because frankly, they often get abused.

I've had some last for 10 years, other for 2, and I'm not kind to mine.

I'd say they have 2 issues to deal with: temp and being dropped. The cases have no cooling, and larger drives need greater cooling than smaller drives.

I currently have 2 external drives (4 TB each) I use for local redundancy. When sync happens, they get quite warm, so I keep an old 80mm case fan on them. These are 5 year old drives that have been running this way for 3 years. SMART doesn't report any errors or high temps, but without the fan I'm sure it would.

[–] DesolateMood@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 days ago

Like I said, I didn't buy it expecting it to last forever, but I haven't run into any problems yet and I've only had the drive for about a year now. We'll see how it holds up when it hits real long term numbers.