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TrueNAS – Open Enterprise Storage

What We Heard at NAB 2026 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS V160 Launched: High Performance, No All-Flash Tax TrueNAS 26 Is Here: What's New in This Major Release TrueNAS Connect: Enterprise Features on Your Own Hardware TrueNAS Immutability: Multi-Layered Data Protection & Ransomware Defense TrueNAS CEO Note to Community: We Are All TrueNAS TrueNAS 25.10.2 Goldeye: 100+ Fixes & What's New TrueNAS Names Brett Davis CEO for Enterprise Growth TrueNAS Plans for 2026: TrueNAS 26 & OpenZFS 2.4 Roadmap TrueNAS Connect Plus Now Available for All Community Users TrueNAS R60: High-Speed NVMe Storage for AI Workloads Introducing TrueNAS WebShare: Secure Web-Based File Sharing TrueNAS 25.10.1: Goldeye Matures, Performs, and Connects TrueNAS & Veeam v13: Turnkey Cyber‑Resilient Backups Customer Advantages of the TrueNAS Open Core Model TrueNAS Named Data Storage Company of the Year 2025 TrueNAS 25.10: Smarter, Streamlined Updates & Tools TrueNAS F-Series Shines at IBC with Two “Best of Show” Awards TrueNAS 25.10 “Goldeye”: NVMe‑oF, Unified, Simplified Storage Introducing TrueNAS Connect: Secure Monitoring & Alerts The ESG Advantage of Open Enterprise Architecture: Why TrueNAS Is the Sustainable Choice | TrueNAS - Open TrueNAS 25.10-RC1: New Features, Fixes & OpenZFS 2.3.4 Seamless Setup: Exploring TrueNAS Web-Driven Installation | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS 25.10 “Goldeye” BETA is Available TrueNAS 25.10 “Goldeye” Highlights TrueNAS 25.04.2: Fangtooth restores Virtualization iXsystems Rebrands as TrueNAS to Reflect Market Momentum in Enterprise Storage | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise June 1 - Apps Migration Deadline for TrueNAS 24.04 and 23.10 TrueNAS 25.04.1: Fangtooth Unification Gains Momentum TrueNAS 24.10.2.2 Prepares for IP Addressing of Apps TrueNAS H30 and F100 add Fast Dedup with TrueNAS 25.04 Meet TrueNAS Community Edition – The Future of Open Storage TrueNAS Apps Made Easy with Electric Eel & Fangtooth TrueNAS H30 Secures Two ‘Best of Show’ Honors at NAB 2025 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS H30 Wins Best of Show Awards at NAB 2025 TrueNAS 25.04: Fangtooth is RELEASED Slash Your Virtualization Costs with TrueNAS Storage TrueCommand 3.1 Enhances Management and Monitoring TrueNAS 25.04: Fangtooth Unification Begins with New Features Fangtooth Unification Begins | TrueNAS iXsystems Experiences Record Growth in TrueNAS Enterprise Storage, Spins Off Server Business to Amaara How to Set Up and Install TrueNAS CORE Yes, You Can (Still) Virtualize TrueNAS TrueNAS enables Container Storage and Kubernetes | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS 12.0-U2 is Released | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage OpenZFS 2.0 Ships First on TrueNAS | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS 12.0-U1 is Scheduled for early December | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage iXsystems TrueNAS M60 Recognized as SDC Awards Storage Hardware Innovation of the Year Finalist | TrueNAS - TrueNAS 12.0 is Released! The TrueNAS Mini X and Mini X+ are here! Cross-Site Disaster Recovery with TrueNAS TrueNAS SCALE Release Plan | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage iXsystems Unveils Industry's Fastest OpenZFS Storage System with Launch of TrueNAS M60 | TrueNAS - Open TrueNAS 12.0 BETA2 Showcases Performance Improvements | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Be One of the First to Test Drive TrueNAS 12.0 BETA | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS is Multi-OS New-New TrueNAS Logo Unveiled | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Recession Proof Storage | FreeNAS 11.3-U3.1 Now Available - Issue #80 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Open Source Infrastructure is Recession-Proof | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Understanding How OpenZFS Keeps Your Data Safe | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage You Can Influence the TrueNAS CORE Roadmap! | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS CORE is the new FreeNAS Setting Up Users, Permissions, and ACLs on FreeNAS | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS Updates for VMware vSphere 7 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage How to Set Up Windows SMB Shares on FreeNAS | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage FreeNAS and TrueNAS are Unifying Introducing the FreeNAS Mini E+ and All-Flash Minis | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Plex Permissions in FreeNAS 11.3 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Latest TrueNAS and FreeNAS Release Delivers Wizards, Plugins, and Accelerated Replication | TrueNAS - Open How To Back Up Google Drive to FreeNAS | TrueNAS How To Enable Wireguard on FreeNAS 11.3 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage The Official FreeNAS Hardware Guide | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage December 11 Plugins Update: ClamAV Fix & CloudStack FreeNAS Mini Black Friday Sale Starts Now! - Issue #73 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Breaking Down the FreeNAS Mini E! | TrueNAS TrueCommand Shifts to Prime Time | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage AMD EPYC 7002 Powers Scalable TrueNAS Solutions FreeNAS and TrueNAS 11.3 make their Debuts October 30 Plugins Update | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Overview of Datasets and Snapshots in FreeNAS | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage September 13 Plugins Update | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Mount a TrueNAS or FreeNAS Share to a Docker Host | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Open ZFS vs. Btrfs | and other file systems | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage ZFS vs. OpenZFS Backup Evolved: Asigra Plugin for FreeNAS Back Up Plugins and Jails on FreeNAS | TrueNAS Take Command of Your NAS Fleet with TrueCommand™ | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Run S3 Object Storage on FreeNAS and TrueNAS | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Sync Files to Dropbox with TrueNAS or FreeNAS February Plugin Updates & New Plugins for Testing Six Metrics for Measuring ZFS Pool Performance Part 2 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage Six Metrics for Measuring ZFS Pool Performance Part 1 | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage TrueNAS M-Series Certified for Veeam Backup FreeNAS 11.1 is Now Available for Download! | TrueNAS FreeNAS 11.0 Released with VM & S3 Storage Support To SLOG or not to SLOG: How to best configure your ZFS Intent Log | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage vCenter Web Client Plug-in for TrueNAS Now Available | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage The ZFS ZIL and SLOG Demystified | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage FreeNAS: A Worst Practices Guide | TrueNAS - Open Enterprise Storage FreeNAS vs TrueNAS
Introducing the TrueNAS V140
Pee Jay Latombo · 2026-06-19 · via TrueNAS – Open Enterprise Storage

The full V-Series platform, sized for the workloads most teams actually run.

There’s a version of every storage refresh that ends with a system bigger and faster than the workload ever needed, plus a support contract to match. The headroom looks great on the spec sheet, and it’s worth buying when the workload demands it. The V140 is built for when it doesn’t.

The TrueNAS V140 starts from a different question. Not “how much performance can we buy?” but “what does this workload actually need?” For a large share of enterprise storage, the honest answer is capacity, reliability, and a software stack that holds up. Not a throughput number you’ll never reach.

Expanding the V-series Family

The V-Series is the flagship TrueNAS enterprise platform, introduced earlier this year with the TrueNAS V160. Each system is a 4U dual-controller appliance, built on AMD EPYC processors with a tri-mode drive architecture: 24 front-loading bays that accept SAS HDDs and Gen4 NVMe SSDs in any combination, plus four rear Gen5 NVMe bays for dedicated high-velocity caching.

Dual-controller high availability with automated failover is standard across all configurations. The V160 is our high-performance configuration, rated for up to 30 GB/s with HDD and 40 PB of raw capacity in Hybrid Flash, or up to 60 GB/s and 20 PB of capacity in All-Flash. The V140 is the next model in the line, bringing that same platform to a different set of workloads.

The same powerful platform, at a smaller scale

The V140 is the newest model in the TrueNAS V-Series, and it’s worth being exact about what “smaller” means. The hardware is smaller than the V160: fewer cores, less cache, lower ceilings on capacity and bandwidth. The platform is not.

It runs the same full TrueNAS Enterprise software, the same release as every other V-Series system. Dual-controller high availability with automated failover. OpenZFS underneath. All-inclusive licensing, so no feature hides behind a higher tier and no capacity penalty waits for you at renewal. The protocols your environment already speaks, including SMB, NFS, iSCSI, Fibre Channel, NVMe-oF, and S3, are all included.

For the V140 specifically: a 16-core AMD EPYC controller pair, 192 GB of RAM, up to 12 TB of read cache, 15 GB/s of system bandwidth, and up to 16 PB of raw disk capacity. At 600W average draw, it fits the data centers where power and cooling are real line items.

Because the TrueNAS V140 and V160 share the same chassis, it’s ready to adapt and grow if your workload profile shifts – a virtualization footprint that grows faster than forecast, or a new AI initiative that moves from pilot to production and starts demanding real throughput – you can upgrade your V140 to a V160 by swapping controllers in place, one at a time. No new chassis. No data migration.

Built for the workloads that fill the racks

Most organizations don’t run their entire footprint at full intensity. They run a lot of file services. Backup and archive. Secondary storage. Dev and test. These workloads reward capacity and resilience far more than a peak throughput figure.

That’s the V140’s job, and it does it without asking you to overbuy for the few workloads that need more. There’s no steep learning curve and no migration project to get there. If you already run TrueNAS, nothing changes. If you don’t, there’s still just one operational model to learn, once.

Who should look at the V140

The V140 is a strong fit if you’re:

  • Running file services, backup, archive, or secondary storage as the bulk of your footprint
  • Standing up dev/test or staging that needs full enterprise data services without top-tier spend
  • Adding a second site or DR target that mirrors your primary platform exactly
  • Working in a power- or space-constrained rack where wattage and heat matters
  • Consolidating a mix of aging arrays onto one platform and one support relationship
  • A growing team that wants the complete TrueNAS Enterprise feature set without paying for headroom you won’t use

It’s the wrong call in one case: when your primary workloads are IO-intensive. AI training and inference, 4K/8K post-production, and high-density virtualization saturate bandwidth, and that’s what the V160 is built for. Buy for the workload in front of you. If that workload is demanding, reach for the V160.

The bottom line

The V140 doesn’t make you trade the platform to match the hardware to the job. Same software, same HA, same licensing, scaled to the workloads most teams actually run. Match the machine to the work, and put the difference where it earns more.

Explore the TrueNAS V-Series