Drive Module Screws for attaching hard drive to module

I have been searching far and wide for 6-32, .25 inch long screws that match the original screws shipped with raid drive modules. I stumbled across a post for a european company that won't sell or ship to the USA, but the spec sheet they sent me is not the same screw. I can't believe these screws are not available anywhere in the US. They appear to be a custom manufactured item. Does anyone know where I can buy 100 to 200 and not pay a fortune for them? Thanks!

I do understand. But, your original question was "is there a difference in attaching a hard drive to the AEBS using the ethernet port vs. the usb port" - and the answer is that there some very significant fundamental differences in these two types of connections. Comparing a USB drive and a NAS device is almost like comparing apples and oranges.
If you are connecting a hard drive via USB to the Base Station's USB port, then you are effectively using the combination of the USB drive and the Base Station as a NAS drive. Data access speed, connectivity problems, security and so on are completely determined by the Base Station's hardware and its USB connection to the drive. Network communications problems with the USB drive would all be the fault of the Base Station, not the drive. USB interface hard drives are fairly dumb devices all by themselves - they consist of little more than a box with a hard drive and a USB interface.
Contrast that with a device designed to function as a NAS device. These devices connect directly to a network - whether or not that connection happens to be one of the LAN ports on the Base Station is of no real importance. The NAS could be cabled to an ethernet switch which in turn is uplinked to one of the Base Station's LAN ports - and nothing would change. With a NAS device, Data access speed, connectivity problems, security and so on are completely determined by the NAS device. None of these factors are determined by the Base Station it happens to be connected to. Network communications problems with the NAS device would all be the fault of the NAS device, not the Base Station. NAS devices are (in contrast to USB hard drives) a fair bit more intelligent, since inside their box is not only a hard drive and an ethernet interface, but also a processor, memory, and software that provides all the functionality of the file sharing component of OS X and/or Windows.

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