Spyke

it's sad how far Seagate's reputation has fallen. In the early 90's having Seagate SCSI drives in your pc was a point of pride!

13
SupraMarioreply
lemmy.world

I've got WD drives with like 10+ years of power on time...still works. All, and I'm not joking, of my HDD failures have been seagates. I lost 4 drives and the 5th and final seagate I purchased, started showing errors just a year into its life. Haven't bought one since.

6
Blackmistreply
feddit.uk

I think the IronWolf drives are generally OK. But what's inside this is probably going to be a cheapo Barracuda drive.

You generally get what you pay for. If a drive is an amazing bargain, I wouldn't trust it with anything I needed. If you're just using it as another replaceable drive in a RAID array then whatever, I guess.

5
Rentlarreply
lemmy.ca

When I bought Seagate externals, the Barracuda line only went up to 8TB so anything above that was an Ironwolf or Exynos. Do you know if that's still the case?

1
HeyJoereply
lemmy.world

If it means anything, I have been using Seagate Ironwolf HD's in my NAS for years now after having to switch to them when HGST went under, and I have yet to have any issues with one yet. I think I have 5 right now.

4

5 is such a tiny sample size. Back blaze over and over again shows how many Seagate models are horrible. The last reports has the worst Seagate model they use at 9.47% failure. No thanks.

3

That's a pretty good price. I don't know how much I trust Seagate to get a drive that big though.

7
lemmy.world

Is that a good idea? I mean having all of that storage on one component? Wouldn't it be safer to split that data onto separate drives?

6
Zorsithreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Probably a good candidate for drive shucking. Can get a good, potentially enterprise grade, hard drive for cheaper than the drive alone would cost. Then stick it into a NAS.

7

Actually, large drives like this make perfect sense in RAID arrays. Just make sure your using at least RAID 6 with drives this big - the rebuild times are scary long. I run a mix of 18TB drives in my home server and the key is having a solid backup strategy, not avoiding large drives. No matter the brand, always assume any drive will fail.

2

I would wait. There have been recent developments about heating the HD surface with a laser to increase storage capacity. I think it's wise to see how this develops and wether it causes problems.

3

what you even filling it with ? unless you are running a YT channel

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