Firstly RAID is not a backup in itself, you may have a backup on a RAID array, but never mistake redundancy for a backup. R5 fell out of favour when it became increasingly obvious that it was becoming mathematically improbable for a perfect rebuild to occur as drive sizes scaled up, between write errors and the risk of additional drives failing during rebuild due to them being at similar points in the life cycle and the extra load created during a rebuild, it’s not acceptable to run R5 in a lot of places/scenario’s now.
R0 used to be a thing for speed, SSD’s fixed that. Then it was a thing for capacity as large SSD’s were expensive (ignore the issues with TRIM, people still do/did it), now NVMe has largely fixed that and capacity has reached a point where it’s reasonably priced. R1 still has a place in some scenario’s, but realistically we are approaching a point where fast connections and cloud based storage are viable options for an offsite backup and becoming viable for ‘disposable’ data eg media.
Anyway,
@Amraam how did you get on?