Remember, you already have a single copy of your data spread over a number of hard disks. If you keep these original drives safe, you'll "only" have to copy it to two new devices, to stand a reasonable chance of keeping your precious files safe.
Well, the Toshiba is £310,
If you were considering buying two disks at £310 each and spending another £60+ on a RAID enclosure, you've got a pretty good budget of around £680. Even if each individual backup amounts to 20TB, that's still a reasonable budget.
How you divide up your £680 budget it up to you.
You could buy a couple of 20TB Toshiba MG10ACA20TE drives on Amazon for £309.67 each and bung them in good quality USB3 powered housings.
Some people have recommended Seagate Exos (£317.52 for 20TB on Amazon) or WD Gold (starting at £472 for 20TB, way outside your budget).
Alternatively, if you're prepared to buy hard disks refurbished by the manufacturer, Amazon are selling 10TB Seagate Enterprise Capacity v6 ST10000NM0046 drives for £98.71 each. At that price I might buy a couple myself. You could buy 40TB for less than £400, plus the USB housings, saving up to 200 quid.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Seagate-En...eywords=10tb+hard+drive&qid=1728139424&sr=8-4
If you're put off by the thought of buying refurbished drives or used "pulls" from servers, remember one of my six 6TB Toshiba N300 NAS drives (purchased new) developed bad blocks in my HP ML350P server, after only 6 days total elapsed running time. Buying brand new doesn't guarantee long life. All drives die eventually, some sooner than others. If you want to see how well various drives survive, check out the Backblaze stats:
https://www.backblaze.com/blog/backblaze-drive-stats-for-q1-2024/
As an example, Backblaze had 37,676 16TB Toshiba MG08ACA16TA drives running for an aggregate total of 3,285,527 hours and 81 drives failed, average fail rate 0.91%.
Storage Solutions
In addition to TrueNAS servers, my data is copied to hard drives in a number of desktop PCs (more accurately, full towers). Do you own more than one desktop computer, with room inside for additional 3.5in hard disks? If so, you could dispense with the external USB3 housing(s) or RAID enclosure and spread your backup drives around at least
three machines. You could repurpose an old machine or buy a cheap second hand Dell office PC, then use them as backup devices. There are lots of possibilities. Of course you'd need more room to keep backup computers, instead of a RAID or USB housing.
I'm thinking about replacing my internal hard drives with an external RAID 1 array of 20 TB enterprise drives for some extra data retention in case of failure.
The word "replacing" makes it sound as if you're going to copy the data off the old drives, then wipe them and use the disks for something else, but the term "extra data retention" implies you'll keep the old disks and data intact.
I'm just a random dude trying to store data safely, protected from hardware failure.
Likewise. My backups at home are a hodge-podge of disparate storage solutions, accumulated over the years. I started off saving programmes to cassette tape, next it was 5.25" and 3.5" floppy discs, then hard disks and finally back to (LTO) tape for some archives.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_Tape-Open
Various LTO manufacturers claim you can store files on tape for up to 30 years, but you'd still need a working drive to read the tape back on.
https://www.stockroomlondon.com/2024/09/16/how-long-does-lto-storage-last/
Please keep in mind that I'm not an IT specialist applying for a job, not even a client looking for company storage solutions.
The reason forum members with more experience are trying to steer you clear of RAID as your
only copy, is because no single device constitutes a backup. You need multiple copies on different devices/media.
RAID stands for Redundant Array of Independent (or Inexpensive) Disks. Nowhere in the title does it mention the word "Backup".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID
You can use RAID as a backup,
provided it's not your only copy.
We're simply trying to help you avoid pitfalls other folk have fallen into, losing their irreplaceable files.
Good luck.