1-Bay oder 2-bay nas: Should You Buy a 2-Bay or 4-Bay NAS Drive in 2021? – NAS Compares

Should You Buy a 2-Bay or 4-Bay NAS Drive in 2021? – NAS Compares

Choosing Between Buying a 2-Bay or 4 Bay NAS

For many users who decided to make the switch from subscription-based Cloud services and to their own private NAS server, it can be tricky to understand exactly what they need in terms of storage and power. Network-attached storage NAS has evolved rapidly over the years and now there is a tremendous range of solutions that vary in size and ability to choose from, often resulting in the most expensive servers not always being the most capable. One of the first hurdles that many users encounter when choosing their first NAS drive is choosing between a 2-bay NAS and 4-Bay. With the majority of NAS brands out there offering most standard solutions and across different hard drive scales, choosing between these different sized NAS is not as straightforward as one might think. So today I’m going to talk to you about the differences between each, which one is the best value, their advantages and hopefully help you decide which one best suits your storage needs. Let’s start.

2-Bay vs 4-Bay NAS – Storage, Expandability and Capacity

On the face of it, it seems pretty obvious that a 4-Bay NAS model with its increased storage bays will be the better storage option overall. How on earth can a NAS device that is 50% less in media bays possibly compete?!? Well, in recent years the largest available capacity in hard drives has massively increased and therefore the total potential terabytes available for each media bay has grown drastically. Yes, you could fully populate a four-Bay NAS with 4TB hard drives, but you could always just use a single 12TB hard drive at a lower price per TB in 2021 and regardless of whether you use RAID 0 or RAID1 with two disks, still have a huge capacity in a 2 Bay NAS. Additionally, these days a number of brands provide the same level of external enclosure expandability on both the 2-Bay and 4 Bay NAS systems (eg DS920+ / DS720+ and TS-253D / TS-453D), therefore 2-Bay NAS does not have the lower metaphorical glass ceiling that it once had in terms of additional storage down the line. Indeed, you can even expand a RAID 1 to a RAID 5 on a 2-bay but spreading it over both the NAS and expansion enclosure at once, to provide an excellent way to still increase the storage on your 2-Bay later on and not feel trapped within its dual media design architecture.

However, this is not quite as cut and dry as it appears. Despite the improvements in 2-Bay NAS architecture in recent years, there is always going to be one big day 1 advantage in the flexibility of 4 Bay NAS that 2-Bays cannot really match. That is that you do not necessarily need to fully populate a 4-bay on day one and many users go ahead with just putting two hard drives inside a 4-Bay NAS in a RAID 1 at the start. Not only does this give you exactly the same level of storage and performance that you would find in 2 Bay NAS, but it also allows you to add drives to this partially populated NAS and expand its storage pool from a RAID 1 to a RAID 5, increasing the total storage gradually throughout the lifespan of the system, WITHOUT buying a whole expansion chassis. This allows flexibility in how much storage you use now and how much you need to graduate to later at a minimal cost at the start. In summary, although 4 Bay NAS is still technically the better storage, flexibility and capacity option, a 2-Bay is not necessarily as inferior as it once was.

2-Bay vs 4-Bay NAS – Price and Value

This is an often underestimated factor in choosing between a 2-bay or 4-bay NAS system. Many people assume that a 4-Bay NAS costs more money to buy and even more money to populate. Although this is still technically true, it is hardly any more expensive to operate a 4-bay NAS 24×7 than a 2-bay. As far as actual day 1 costs go, notwithstanding the flexible storage installation mentioned in the previous subject, 4-Bay NAS systems allow you to use smaller capacity hard drives in order to match the same storage on larger hard drives. What this means is that a 4-ay NAS allows you to install four 4TB drives inside in a RAID5 and arrived at a lower price per terabyte than 2x 12TB drives. Depending on how you scale your storage and the number of drives you use, 2-Bay shares and 4-Bay NAS can retail at a similar price point and will differ only depending on the drive you choose and the RAID configuration you opt for.

Likewise, returning to the point of the cost of 4-bays as being more expensive than 2-bays, the newest generation NAS drives will often barely be more than $100-150 difference in their prices between 2 and 4 bays and are largely identical in CPU, Memory and ports in every other way. 4-Bays may seem like a bigger chunk of money (especially for those already feeling stretched on a prosumer 2-Bay) but if you are prepared to perhaps drop the capacity you have in mind 1-2TB  (i.e purchase 4TBs, not 6TBs)  to compensate this price difference, the result will be that your 4 Bay NAS can achieve much higher read and write speeds with more drives being accessed simultaneously, whilst also opening the door to dual-drive redundancy configurations (i. e RAID 6) and will ultimately provide a more responsive, higher performing and data safe NAS for all of your needs.

In summary, the savings available in choosing a two-bay over a four-bay can easily be countered in the grand scheme of things by scaling the capacity or architecture of the HDD you choose to put inside. The money saved in a 2 bay might well be money you need to spend a year or two down the line.

2-Bay vs 4-Bay NAS – Power, Performance and Speed

As mentioned, using 4 hard drives in a RAID 5 will likely provide better performance than two drives in a RAID 1 environment. This performance can be measured by traditional direct read and write activity between your client hardware and your NAS, or it can be measured by the performance of individual applications and services from within the network-attached storage drive itself (i.e the NAS software and services). When looking at buying your first NAS, many will overlook 2-Bay’s simply because of this performance boost available in the 4-Bay alternative models. However, enterprise-grade/Pro hard drives Seagate ironwolf Pro or EXOs) will often provide performance benefits in a RAID 1 environment that can surpass the use of standard hard drives in a RAID 5. Of course, Pro series drives cost $40-50 more per drive, but also have longer warranties, data recovery services, more onboard cache and faster rpm to increase that read and write speed, so you get more for your money ultimately. Additionally, if you plan on taking advantage of 10Gbe, either with a port already on your NAS or as an upgrade down the line via PCIe, then you are much, MUCH better off with a 4-Bay NAS, as a 2-Bay (even if populated with the latest generation SATA SSDs) cannot fully saturate 1,000MB/s.

Finally, it is worth discussing that a large number of modern 4-Bay NAS systems in 2021/2022 arrived with dedicated SSD caching bays. These bays do not replace the existing SATA hard drives and are parallel media bays that allow you to install M2 NVMe SSD to improve the internal performance of your NAS by copying more frequently accessed files partially or fully onto the SSD to reduced access time to these more popular pieces of data. Although a handful of 2 Bay NAS systems have arrived on the market with support of dedicated SSD caching bays (Lockerstor 2 and DS720+), the feature is still more available on foUr Bay solutions and for many users that want to graduate the utility of their NAS from home to prosumer and inevitably into business use, the ability to upgrade internal performance in this way can often sway buyers to opt for a 4-bay NAS.

2-Bay vs 4-Bay NAS – Power Use, Noise and Deployment

Unsurprisingly, the bigger the NAS drive, the more power it will consume. When comparing like-for-like deployments in similar architecture on 2-Bay and 4-Bay NAS, the latter will always use a little bit more. This is the reason that you will generally find that the PSU on a 4-Bay NAS is always of a higher what rating. However overall, unless you are pushing the system particularly hard, the simple act of adding two more SATA hard drives will generally make a minuscule difference and is hardly a reason to compare these two overall – A PSU power rating is the MAXIMUM draw it can make, not the amount it will be using constantly! However, in terms of vibration generated when the system is in operation and the rise in assisted fan operation as usage increases, generates more heat which makes a noticeable impact on the ambient noise generated when you are running a 2-Bay vs a 4-Bay.

The power difference will still remain rather small as these are still quite small components but if you are especially sensitive to noise then the increased drive and fan-based sound will annoy you. Additionally, this increase in ambient noise generation scales accordingly if you use larger capacity drives or more enterprise-level hard drive builds. So therefore if you are looking at a 2-Bay NAS with bigger capacity hard drives, it will still generate a comparable level of ambient noise that a 4-Bay would when populated with standard class NAS media or smaller capacities. Now that brands like Seagate and WD have reshaped their respective portfolios for NAS hard drive media in a way that ALL large capacity hard drive (eg 10TB and above) are Pro class (i.e noisier), it makes the lines increasingly blurry between 2-Bay and 4-Bay NAS noise levels. Below is an example of the noise difference between a standard class and pro class drive noise generation in just a single drive. It may seem a tad irrelevant, but it’s important if you are a user looking to go for a smaller NAS with BIGGER drives:

WD Red NAS Hard Drive Noise Test WD Red PRO NAS Hard Drive Noise Test

2-Bay vs 4-Bay NAS – Conclusion

So as you can see, the difference between a 2-Bay and a 4-Bay NAS is a great deal more than the number of available hard drives you can use. Each kind of NAS system can have its performance, capacity, ambient noise and power consumption scaled in a multitude of ways in order to facilitate the best possible network attached storage solution for you. Users on a tight budget might all too soon end up purchasing a 2 Bay NAS without realising that a 4-Bay has scalability that can save you money down the line. Likewise, users who like to invest a little bit more long term or prefer their NAS investment to be a little bit more spread over the lifespan of their product will tend to err towards a 4-Bay solution, without realising that a 2-Bay is still quite viable in the short term and modern scalability of NAS means taht a 2-Bay NAS is not quite the dead-end it once was! Below I have detailed some of the BEST examples of 2-Bay and 4-Bay NAS Synology, QNAP and Asustor that are great examples of margins between each tier has become spectacularly narrow.  If you are still unsure on how to proceed, be sure to take advantage of the free advice service here on NASComapres using the boxes at the bottom. We (me and Eddie the web guy!) answer every email and do it without profit in mind (i.e it’s absolutely free), so though it might take an extra day for us to reply, we will get back to you with recommendations on the best solution for you.

Synology DS720+ 2-Bay – $399+

Synology DS920+ 4-Bay – $559+

J4125 4-Core CPU – 2/6GB DDR4 – NVMe SSD – 2x1Gbe

 

J4125 4-Core CPU – 4/8GB DDR4 – NVMe SSD – 2x1Gbe

 

QNAP TS-253D 2-Bay – $389+

QNAP TS-453D 4-Bay – $549+

J4125 4-Core CPU – 4/8GB DDR4 – PCIe Slot – HDMI – 2×2. 5Gbe

 

J4125 4-Core CPU – 4/8GB DDR4 – PCIe Slot – HDMI – 2×2.5Gbe

 

Asustor Lockerstor 2 2-Bay – $379+

Asustor Lockerstor 4 4-Bay – $499+

J4125 4-Core CPU – 4/8GB DDR4 – NVMe SSD – 2×2.5Gbe J4125 4-Core CPU – 4/8GB DDR4 – NVMe SSD – 2×2.5Gbe

 

 

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Summary

Reviewer

Robbie

Review Date

Reviewed Item

Should You Buy a 2-Bay or 4-Bay NAS Drive

Author Rating

5

Synology: 1-Bay, 2-Bay, 4-Bay oder SSD-Cache

Sep 6, 2020 | Synology | 2 Kommentare

Synology Ratgeber 1 Bay, 2 Bay, 4 Bay oder 5 Bay

NAS-Systeme oder private Cloudsysteme gibt es mittlerweile in vielen verschiedenen Ausführungen, so dass man schnell den Überblick verlieren könnte. Mit diesem kleinen Ratgeber möchte ich dir einen Überblick geben, wann du zu welchem System greifen solltest und was jeweils die Vorteile und Nachteile sind. 

Für wen eignet sich ein 1-NAS-System?

Für dein Einstieg oder als Einsteiger empfehle ich den meisten ein NAS-System mit einem Festplatteneinschub. Mit nur einer Festplatte kommst du recht kostengünstig in die Netzwerkspeicher-Welt rein und kannst die Systeme kennenlernen. Du benötigst hier nur eine Festplatte und das entsprechende Gehäuse

Mit nur einer Festplatte kann man dieses System am ehesten mit einer externen Festplatte vergleichen, die überall und ständig erreichbar ist. Jedoch ist die Ausfallsicherheit oder Redundanz bei diesem Modell nicht gegeben. Fällt diese Festplatte auf einem technischen Defekt aus, sind alle deine Daten verloren.

Daher empfehle ich dir ein 1-Bay NAS nur zu nutzen, wenn du es zum Einsteig ausprobieren möchtest oder nochmals ein externes Backup in einem anderen Haus unterbringen möchtest.

Information: Ich nehme bei allen Festplatten eine 4 TB Festplatte als Basis, natürlich kannst du diese nach belieben durch eine größeren oder kleinere ersetzen. 

  • Zur Verfügung stehender Speicherplatz: 4 TB
  • Geschwindigkeit beim Lesen und Schreiben: 112 MBit bei der Synology DS118 oder DS220j
  • Datensicherheit: Keine, da nur eine Festplatte
  • RAID-System: 0 – keine Spiegelung
  • Vorteil: sehr schnell
  • Nachteil: keine Ausfallsicherheit
  • Anwendungsbeispiele: Anfänger, einfacher Netzwerkspeicher und für Datenbanken

Empfehlungen an 1-Bay NAS Systeme von Synology

# Vorschau Produkt Preis
Synology DS118 1 Bay Desktop-NAS-Gehäuse 180,18 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen
2 Synology DS120j 1 Bay NAS DiskStation (Diskless), 512MB DDR3L 114,99 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen
Synology Bundle 1-Bay Bundle mit 1x 3TB HDD, DS118-3TB, Bestpreis Festplatte 278,56 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen

Letzte Aktualisierung am 1.12.2022 um 12:38 Uhr / Affiliate Links / Bilder von der Amazon Product Advertising API


Synology Ratgeber 1 Bay, 2 Bay, 4 Bay oder 5 Bay

Warum ist ein 2-Bay NAS mit zwei Festplatteneinschüben für den Alltag und für Privatanwender optimal?

Schnell wirst du merken, dass du lieber ein größeres System benötigst. Ein 2-Bay NAS System findest du in Hülle und Fülle und eignet sich für die meisten Anwendungen. Ganz egal, ob du als Privatperson, Kleinunternehmer, professionellere Anwender oder kleinere Firma deine Daten, Dokumente oder Bilder suchen möchtest, gehst du hier einen guten Kompromiss zwischen Preis und Leistung ein.

Für ein 2-Bay NAS benötigst du zwei Festplatten, die du wahlweise wie eine große Festplatte nutzen kannst. Ich empfehle bei einem 2 Bay NAS allerdings die sogenannte RAID 1 Konfiguration. Dabei werden die Daten von der ersten auf die zweite Festplatte gespiegelt. Sie bietet so ein gutes Maß an Datensicherheit und Schnelligkeit und verkraftet den Ausfall von einer Festplatte.

Für professionellere Anwender stehen leistungsfähigere 2-Bay NAS Modelle unter anderen mit SSD-Cache bereit. Damit können Daten, die öfter abgerufen werden, in eine optionale M.2 SSD zwischengespeichert und stehen so deutlich schneller zur Verfügung. Je nach Anwendungsgebiet kann die SSD auch als Lese- oder Schreibcache eingesetzt werden.

Information: Ich nehme bei allen Festplatten eine 4 TB Festplatte als Basis, natürlich kannst du diese nach belieben durch eine größere oder kleinere ersetzen.  

  • Zur Verfügung stehender Speicherplatz:
    RAID 0: 4 TB x 2 = 8 TB
    RAID 1: 4 TB x 2 ( – 1 Festplatten für Schutz) = 4 TB
  • Geschwindigkeit beim Lesen und Schreiben: 112 MB bei DS220j,  DS218, DS218play, DS220+, DS720+ (deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache)
  • Datensicherheit: Ausfall von einer Festplatte bei RAID 1
  • Mögliche RAID-Systeme: RAID 0 und RAID 1
  • Vorteil: sehr schnell auch mit Ausfallsicherheit
  • Nachteil: es steht nur knapp 50 % Speicherplatz zur Verfügung (teuer)
  • Anwendungsbeispiele: Privatpersonen, kleinere Büros und Nutzern mit höherem Sicherheitsbedürfnis

Empfehlungen an 2-Bay NAS Systeme von Synology

# Vorschau Produkt Preis
Synology DS218 2-Bay-Desktop-NAS-Gehäuse 287,00 EUR
268,26 EUR
Bei Amazon kaufen
2 Synology DS220+ 2 Bay Desktop NAS — Netzwerkspeicher Gehäuse (2GB RAM) 370,00 EUR
348,10 EUR
Bei Amazon kaufen
Synology Bundle DS220j 2-Bay 6TB Bundle mit 2X 3TB HDs, Bestpreis Festplatte 299,91 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen

Letzte Aktualisierung am 1.12.2022 um 12:38 Uhr / Affiliate Links / Bilder von der Amazon Product Advertising API


Synology Ratgeber 1 Bay, 2 Bay, 4 Bay oder 5 Bay

Warum ist ein 4-Bay NAS für Kleinunternehmer oder kleinere Büros optimal?

Ein NAS-System mit 4-Bays richtet sich in erster Linie an Unternehmer oder an kleinere Büros, die einen großen Wert auf Datensicherheit und viel Speicherplatz legen. Mit einem 4-Bay bieten sich deutlich mehr RAID-Möglichkeiten an, die Daten zu speichern und die Ausfallsicherheit zu erhöhen.

Während man bei einer 2-Bay NAS mit Datensicherheit auf ca 50% des verfügbaren Speicherplatz kommt, kann man bei einem 4-Bay NAS mit vier Festplatten auf ca 75% – bei gleicher Ausfallsicherheit und gleichzeitig höher Geschwindigkeit.

Auch bei neueren 4-Bay NAS Modelle gibt es die Möglichkeit auf einen SSD-Cache zu setzen. Damit können Daten, die öfter abgerufen werden, in eine optionale M.2 SSD zwischengespeichert und stehen so deutlich schneller zur Verfügung. Je nach Anwendungsgebiet kann die SSD auch als Lese- oder Schreibcache eingesetzt werden.

Information: Ich nehme bei allen Festplatten eine 4 TB Festplatte als Basis, natürlich kannst du diese nach belieben durch eine größere oder kleinere ersetzen. 

  • Zur Verfügung stehender Speicherplatz:
    RAID 0: 4 TB x 4 = 16 TB
    RAID 1: 4 TB x 4 ( – 2 Festplatten für Schutz) = 8 TB
    RAID 5: 4 TB x 4 ( – 1 Festplatte für Schutz) = 12 TB
    RAID 6: 4 TB x 4 ( – 2 Festplatten für Schutz) = 8 TB
  • Geschwindigkeit beim Lesen und Schreiben: 112 MB bei DS420j, 226 MB bei DS418 und DS420+ (deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache) sowie DS720+ (mit Erweiterung und deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache)
  • Datensicherheit: RAID 5 verkraftet den Ausfall von einer Festplatte bei mindestens 3 verbauten Festplatten, RAID 6 verkraftet den Ausfall von 2 Festplatten bei mindestens 4 verbauten Festplatten.
  • Mögliche RAID-Systeme: RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5 und RAID 6
  • Vorteil: je nach verwendeten RAID steht zwischen 67% – 94% des maximalen Speicherplatzes zur Verfügung. Grundlegend ist RAID 5 zum empfehlen: Gesamtkapazität minus eine Festplatte. Kann beliebig bis zum 16 Festplatten erweitert werden. Ausfallsicherheit
  • Nachteil: Wiederherstellung der ausgefallene Festplatte kann einige Zeit bis einige Tage in Anspruch nehmen. Erhöhter Verschleiß und Ausfallrate in der älteren Platten durch erhöhte Beanspruchung in dieser Zeit. Langsamere Schreibgeschwindigkeit
  • Anwendungsbeispiele: kleinere bis größeren Firmen, Datenarchive

Empfehlungen an 4-Bay NAS Systeme von Synology

# Vorschau Produkt Preis
Synology DS920+ 4 Bay Desktop NAS Gehäuse 751,01 EUR
581,46 EUR
Bei Amazon kaufen
2 Synology DS920+(8G) RAM 4-Bay 16TB Bundle mit 4X 4TB Seagate IronWolf 1. 199,00 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen
3 Synology DS920+ 4-Bay 32TB Bundle mit 4X 8TB Red WD80EFAX 1.575,00 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen

Letzte Aktualisierung am 1.12.2022 um 12:38 Uhr / Affiliate Links / Bilder von der Amazon Product Advertising API


Synology Ratgeber 1 Bay, 2 Bay, 4 Bay oder 5 Bay

Du brauchst 5-Bays oder mehr? Kein Problem!

Du verwaltest ganz viele Daten und hast dir eine Firma aufgebaut? Dann wachsen natürlich auch deine Ansprüche.   Bei steigender Nutzerzahlen auf deinem NAS-System steigen natürlich auch die Anforderungen an das System als solches. Gerade wenn man eine zentrale Datenablage für Firmen einrichtet, entscheidet man sich meist für Systeme mit 5-Bays oder mehr. Auch hierzu haben Synology und QNAP entsprechende Modelle im Programm, welche diesen Anforderungen gewachsen sind.

Die Systeme mit 5-Bays oder mehr sind meist mit 4 Gigabit-Port (oder 10GBe-Netzwerkkarten) sowie SSD-Caches ausgestattet, um den deutlich gestiegenen Anforderungen an Schnelligkeit, Sicherheit und Datensicherheit gewährleisten zu können.

Information: Ich nehme bei allen Festplatten eine 4 TB Festplatte als Basis, natürlich kannst du diese nach belieben durch eine größeren oder kleinere ersetzen. 

  • Zur Verfügung stehender Speicherplatz:
    RAID 0: 4 TB x 5 = 20 TB
    RAID 1: 4 TB x 5 ( – 3 Festplatten für Schutz) = 8 TB
    RAID 5: 4 TB x 5 ( – 1 Festplatte für Schutz) = 16 TB
    RAID 6: 4 TB x 5 ( – 2 Festplatten für Schutz) = 12 TB
  • Geschwindigkeit beim Lesen und Schreiben:  226 MB bei DS1019+ (deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache) , DS1520+ (deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache) , DS920+ (mit Erweiterung und deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache) sowie DS720+ (mit Erweiterung und deutlich schneller mit SSD-Cache)
  • Mögliche RAID-Systeme: RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5 und RAID 6
  • Vorteil: je nach verwendeten RAID steht zwischen 67% – 94% des maximalen Speicherplatzes zur Verfügung. Grundlegend ist RAID 5 zum empfehlen: Gesamtkapazität minus eine Festplatte. Kann beliebig bis zum 16 Festplatten erweitert werden. Ausfallsicherheit
  • Nachteil: Wiederherstellung der ausgefallene Festplatte kann einige Zeit bis einige Tage in Anspruch nehmen. Erhöhter Verschleiß und Ausfallrate in der älteren Platten durch erhöhte Beanspruchung in dieser Zeit. Langsamere Schreibgeschwindigkeit
  • Anwendungsbeispiele: kleinere bis größeren Firmen, Datenarchive – ab RAID 6 auch hochverfügbare Lösungen oder Server mit sehr hohen Anforderungen

Empfehlungen an 5-Bay NAS Systeme von Synology

# Vorschau Produkt Preis
Synology DS1522+ 5-Bay DiskStation NAS AMD Ryzen R1600 8GB Ram 4xRJ-45 1GbE LAN-Port, ohne HDDs Bei Amazon kaufen
2 Synology DS1522+ 30TB 5-Bay Desktop NAS-Lösung, vorinstalliert mit 5 x 6TB Seagate IronWolf. .. 2.266,60 EUR Bei Amazon kaufen
3 Synology DS1520+/20TB IW 5 Bay NAS-System mit 5 x 4TB Seagate IronWolf Festplatten Bei Amazon kaufen

Letzte Aktualisierung am 1. 12.2022 um 12:38 Uhr / Affiliate Links / Bilder von der Amazon Product Advertising API

What a good massage table should look like

A massage table is an important tool for a massage therapist because the quality of the massage depends on it. Masseurs mainly work on massage tables, with the exception of specialists who perform Thai massage or use a massage chair. Professional massage tables have a number of features that affect their functionality. It is necessary that the quality of the table be optimal for both the massage therapist and the client. Among the main criteria for the qualities of a good massage table, one can single out its increased wear resistance, strength and reliability, as well as the ability to adjust its height and position. nine0003

When choosing, you should take into account that massage tables can be 1, 2, 3-section. The simplest is a 1-section massage table, which does not have rising and falling parts. 2-section massage tables are equipped with a movable headrest. And the 3-section massage table, in addition to the movable headrest, has a table top divided into parts, which can be raised and lowered. In addition, 3-section massage tables are usually equipped with an electric motor, thanks to which these sections can be adjusted. Adjustment methods may be different, but the main ones are mechanical and electrical. In tables with electric adjustment, control is carried out using a remote control. nine0003

The need for a certain number of sections is determined in each case, depending on the needs. The cost of massage tables with 2 and 3 sections is, of course, somewhat more expensive than single-section models. However, if you need to raise the head or foot of the table often, then the choice should be stopped for 2 or 3 section with electric motors that make it easier to change the position of the sections. If these functions are needed very rarely, you can save money and limit yourself to a simpler table model, the desired position on which can be achieved using special cushions. nine0003

Also pay attention to how much weight this design can support. Regardless of the maximum load that the table can withstand, it must be handled with care, since loosening and breakage of its elements during operation is possible. When buying a massage table, preference should be given to durable structures. Often, massage tables are equipped with a special cutout for the face, armrests, a head roll and other devices that help create comfort for the visitor. The optimal table is not too hard and not too soft. nine0003

It will be enough that its length is about 2 m, which will allow a person of any height to massage on it. At the same time, the minimum width of a good massage table should be at least 60-65 cm, since on a massage table of a smaller width it will be inconvenient for the patient, and on a larger one — for the massage therapist. The height of the tables is adjusted in accordance with the growth of the massage therapist. In addition, the massage table should be as comfortable as possible, ensuring reliability during the massage. It should also provide a comfortable and rational posture for the massage therapist, since his work requires a lot of energy. If the table is uncomfortable, the work of a specialist will be difficult. An equally important factor in a good massage table is the psychological mood of the patient. Given this requirement, the table should harmoniously fit into the overall interior of the room. nine0003

← History of massage

US MEDICA Apple massage cushion review →

About us | Management company Yurmaty LLC

List of residential buildings served by Yurmaty LLC:

1. 4-storey, 16-apartment, 2-section, No. 9/2, st. Parkhomenko, Salavat, 1602.8 sq.m. 2003 commissioning, serviceable.

2. 3-storey, 12 apartments, 2-section, No. 2, st. River, Salavat, 850.4 sq.m. 2013 commissioning year, serviceable. nine0003

3. 3-storey, 24-apartment, 3-section, No. 8, st. River, Salavat, 1725.4 sq.m. 2014 commissioning year, serviceable.

4. 5-storey, 64-apartment, 7-section, No. 108, Kalinina st., 3639.3 sq.m. 2017 year of commissioning, serviceable.

5. 3-storey, 21 apartments, 2-section, No. 12, st. River, 1122.4 sq. m. 2015 commissioning, serviceable.

6. 3-storey, 43-apartment, 4-section, No. 1A, st. River, 2703.7 sq. m. 2015 commissioning. nine0003

7.3-storey, 33-apartment, 3-section, No. 3, st. River, Salavat, 2320 sq.m. 2018 year of commissioning, serviceable

8.3-storey, 18-apartment, 2-section, No. 42, st. Builders, 852.8 sq. m. 2014 commissioning, serviceable.

9.5-storey, 44-apartment, 2-section, No. 7, Revolutionary street, 3122.08 sq.m. 1994 commissioning, serviceable.

10.3-storey, 32-apartment, 3-section, No. 8, st. Surgical, 1932.88 sq. m. 2019 year of commissioning, serviceable.

11.2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 17, st. Pervomaiskaya, 849.8 sq. m. 1953 commissioning, serviceable.

12.2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 24, st. Ufimskaya, 632.6 sq. m. 1952 commissioning, serviceable.

13.2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 1/26, st. Gorky, 743.4 sq. m. 1952 commissioning, serviceable.

14.3-storey, 20-apartment, 2-section, No. 21/10, st. May Day, Salavat, 1859.9 sq.m. 1953 commissioning, serviceable.

15. 3-storey, 39-apartment, 3-section, No. 49, st. Gorky, Salavat, 2000.8 sq.m. 2014 commissioning year, serviceable.

16. 4-storey, 48-apartment, 3-section, No. 15, st. Karl Marx, Salavat, 1559.1 sq.m. 1958 commissioning, serviceable.

17. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 7, st. B. Khmelnitsky, Salavat, 610.7 sq.m. 1955 commissioning, serviceable. nine0003

18. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 4, st. Gafuri, Salavat, 725.2 sq.m. 1953 commissioning, serviceable.

19.2-storey, 8-apartment, 1 section, No. 24, st. Gorko, Salavat, 420.91 sq.m. 1952 commissioning, serviceable.

20. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 11/19, st. Gafuri, Salavat, 732.2 sq.m. 1951 commissioning, serviceable.

21. 2-storey, 8-apartment, 1-section, No. 17, st. Matrosova, Salavat, 423.2 sq.m. nineteen51 years of commissioning, serviceable.

22. 2-storey, 8-apartment, 1-section, No. 13 a, st. Gafuri, Salavat, 413.3 sq.m. 1951 commissioning, serviceable.

23. 2-storey, 8-apartment, 1-section, No. 28 a, st. Gorky, Salavat, 423.0 sq.m. 1953 commissioning, serviceable.

24. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 22, st. B. Khmelnitsky, Salavat, 748.6 sq.m. 1952 commissioning, serviceable.

25. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 7, st. B. Khmelnitsky, Salavat, 610.7 sq.m. nineteen55 years of commissioning, serviceable.

26. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 4, st. Gafuri, Salavat, 725.2 sq.m. 1953 commissioning, serviceable.

27. 2-storey, 12-apartment, 2-section, No. 20, st. Gafuri, Salavat, 760.9 sq.m. 1950 commissioning, serviceable.

28. 5-storey, 58-apartment, 4-section, No. 6, st. Montazhnikov, Salavat, 2571.8 sq.m. 1987 commissioning, serviceable.