I'd seriously consider sticking to RAID10 for a home lab, especially considering:
A) - You probably don't need that much space
B) - You're probably using consumer drives that will die faster, so quick rebuilds are nice
C) - Double parity is heaps of redundancy for a home lab
D) - RAID10 is fast by any standards, EG: It's the de-facto for non-virtualised SQL servers
A) - You probably don't need that much space
B) - You're probably using consumer drives that will die faster, so quick rebuilds are nice
C) - Double parity is heaps of redundancy for a home lab
D) - RAID10 is fast by any standards, EG: It's the de-facto for non-virtualised SQL servers








