How about this one then?????
Dell Force10 Z9000-AC Core and Fabric Switch, 32x 40GbE ports, Dual AC PSU | eBay
Dell Force10 Z9000-AC Core and Fabric Switch, 32x 40GbE ports, Dual AC PSU | eBay
This is actually an option these days... Don't laugh! I'll hunt around and find pictures of someones water cooled home router/modemor have water cooled 10Gbe switches
This is actually an option these days... Don't laugh! I'll hunt around and find pictures of someones water cooled home router/modem
well 10g enabled does not mean your nas can push 10g (aggregate) to several clients in the first place... (or pull either).True, that's a good suggestion. But I'm guessing what's going to drive my decision the most is the availability of 10GbE-uplinked WiFi access points, because most of my home devices are wireless (e.g. laptops, phones, etc.). My NAS is 10GbE-enabled, sure, but if my laptop cannot push at anything more than 1Gb to it, I'm not increasingly doubtful the whole experiment will make any sense...
My NAS is disk-based, not SSD, but my next plan is to add an SSD NVMe-based SLOG device to it (it's a FreeNAS rig), which would most definitely saturate a 1Gb link (I'm doing Samba-based TimeMachine backups to it, which implies sync writes that'd definitely benefit from a SLOG).well 10g enabled does not mean your nas can push 10g (aggregate) to several clients in the first place... (or pull either).
Is it a disk or ssd based system?
Also anything coming close to 10g on wifi will need a lot of clients and bandwith aggregation anyway