First off, we're in accordance with everyone else that the author should provide more detail concerning the requirements for backups. Specifically, the backup timeframe, actual data size (Gb used), and types must be considered in order to provide accurate suggestions.
However, we'd argue that an offsite backup method is imperative. Disk to Disk (D2D) backups alone are a recipe for disaster. One power surge could destroy both your primary and secondary drives.
We'd suggest tape, D2D backups with trays, or online file storage for your backup needs.
Tape:
VXA-Based Drives or VS 160 Based Drives
Advantages: Very portable, ability to rotate media in order to create redundancy or data history, low cost for long-term data storage
Disadvantages: High TCO with limited media use, slower backup speeds
Cost: From $900 for a VXA-2 (160 Gb Compressed) drive to 2.5K for a VS 160 Autoloader
D2D With Trays:
Secondary disks with removable trays
Advantages: High speed, low upfront and ongoing cost, high capacity backups
Disadvantages: Not very portable, only one or few revisions of your data history, a single point of failure.
Cost: From About $150 (Depends widely on trays used and disk capacity
Online backups:
Store your critical data files on the Internet
Advantages: Extremely portable, ability to access data remotely, unlimited data history capabilities, the best method of disaster recovery
Disadvantages: Speed-Even broadband networks can't compete with tape or D2D speeds
Cost: Widely varies but many plans start at about $5 monthly.
Support Team