I'm assuming you mean the NVMe HAT+ as there is no official SSD HAT.
The theoretical limit is, I believe, much greater than any drive currently available.
In practice it depends on your budget, what file system you format the drive with, and which type of partition table you use. And, for some file systems, whether it's a 32 or 64 bit OS.
One further bit of advice: once you go over about 1TB, traditional HDDs are much, much cheaper than SSDs. If you're not doing lots of small, random, uncached disc IO (like data base updates) or if your use case is limited by other factors (like streaming video across a network) you may find that an HDD is up to the task.
The theoretical limit is, I believe, much greater than any drive currently available.
In practice it depends on your budget, what file system you format the drive with, and which type of partition table you use. And, for some file systems, whether it's a 32 or 64 bit OS.
One further bit of advice: once you go over about 1TB, traditional HDDs are much, much cheaper than SSDs. If you're not doing lots of small, random, uncached disc IO (like data base updates) or if your use case is limited by other factors (like streaming video across a network) you may find that an HDD is up to the task.
Statistics: Posted by thagrol — Sun Dec 22, 2024 11:29 pm