Hi everyone, I am currently looking for a new hard drive to add to my media server and want to buy a 20TB drive. Now the question is what manufacturers would you recommend or avoid?
As far as I can see it’s either Toshiba, Seagate or WD.
Submitted 1 year ago by MaggiWuerze@feddit.de to selfhosted@lemmy.world
Hi everyone, I am currently looking for a new hard drive to add to my media server and want to buy a 20TB drive. Now the question is what manufacturers would you recommend or avoid?
As far as I can see it’s either Toshiba, Seagate or WD.
Scraped Amazon data, sort and filterable: diskprices.com
if you buy off amazon, buy from amazon. buying storage from a marketplace seller is a total crap shoot.
Do they not still intermingle their stock? Last I remember, if a 3rd party seller lists a product that Amazon also sells, the stock is all put together in the Amazon warehouse. I’ve gotten counterfeit electronics even when it says “ships and sold by Amazon”. I’ve started buying from B&H.
Good to know, haven’t had issues but would love other resources if you can offer some.
This is incredible thank you!
Backblaze posts stats regularly on their site, for example:
You can usually find Seagate Exos X20 for around $270 for 20TB, brand new. Great drives with a good warranty. Check Newegg and Server Part Deals.
I went with the Seagate Exos X20. That was three months ago, and so far so good. A lot of reviews said it was super noisy, but I haven’t noticed much difference between it and other hard drives. It’s a bit more noisy when it spins up, but then it’s fine.
I have 5 in a Jonsbo N2 itx case and the drives are barely audible, really pleased with them. Well worth the cost at $270 or less. Don’t spend more than that, worth waiting for deals if you can. I walked out the door at $220 each last year, been up 24/7 (with a UPS) and no issues. Would recommend.
I have 5 WD red pro 16tb in another itx case (N1) and those fuckers are loud despite using the same backplane + rubber slide mount system and a heavier chassis.
That’s what I’m going with I guess. Thanks
You mean two drives right? Or are you going to risk your 20tb of data on just one?
Hgst is always my answer for quality drives, their enterprise drives are simply the best
HGST is Always my go to as well, their drives just work and last a really long time in my experience
I used to build usenet clusters, so constant read and writes 24/7. We had like a 2 percent failure rate after 6 years.
I have 3 slots left in my drive bay. It doesn’t have to be 1
Quick note - HGST enterprise drives are great but those fuckers are LOUD. I’ve had one in my PC for a number of years and it’s done great, pretty quick too - but I can hear it across the room.
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters | More Letters |
---|---|
NAS | Network-Attached Storage |
RAID | Redundant Array of Independent Disks for mass storage |
SSD | Solid State Drive mass storage |
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Just one tech’s opinion but I’ve worked in storage for almost 20years. WD Ultrastar (formerly Hitachi) has the most consistent reliability historically. The current series of WD Gold’s are Ultrastar’s with a different sticker and often cheaper than the Ultrastar stickered version.
They are a little more expensive than their competition but worth it.
2nd Exos, 3rd everything else.
I can’t remember the last time I had one of my Ultrastar arrays having a failure. If my clients need to choose a cheaper drive on price I have tried Ironwolfs and have replaced a bunch of 10tb Ironwolfs a few 12’s.
In the consumer space the Backblaze drive failure releases are good to pay attention to.
Performance wise all SoHo CMR drives are pretty similar in the 7200rpm models.
I got a bunch of the Seagate Exos x18. Greate price/TB and performance. Though they were only the 16TB SATA variant and not the SAS one.
Ive got a pair of 12TB Seagate drives in a NAS that have been running great for a few years, now.
I’ve heard varying opinions on Seagate’s longevity, so your mileage may vary. So far, they haven’t given me any issues.
Yeah I heard that too, wasn’t sure if it was only their SSDs
It wasn’t SSDs, it was regular spinning drives back around 2009.
LoL I’m trying to figure this out too. I found server part deals.
But I don’t have the whole setup figured out yet. I have my jellyfin media drive in just an external enclosure and is just an 8tb which is backed up (sorta not really) on a couple 4tb external drives I have that I copy stuff too and from. Don’t even have a backup of my PC but that’s cause it really doesn’t take much to re set it back up from scratch and I have a second PC running the proxy and stuff…
I’m definitely not the best at this and just accept that I’m doing more than average and nowhere near the people who have this all figured out.
With everyone self hosting huge servers like this, my question is… how can I access some large ones like this? Kodi, Plex?
Kodi & Plex are just ways to manage, organize, and browse a multimedia collection.
If you’re talking about accessing a specific server that has a large collection of multimedia on it, accessing it is fairly simple
Step 1: Have a friend who is hosting such a multimedia collection on their server Step 2: Ask that friend if you can have a login to access it.
To my knowledge there aren’t really any people hosting such servers that are giving away access to people they don’t personally know. Certainly not for free.
I think the illegality of it usual restricts it to people you know fairly well.
I have data I don’t want to miss on mirrored WD red drives. Oldest set is from '14, but are more in sleep mode then active. (Also 2TB drives, newest are 4 TB, I’m not even close to 20 TB)
I purchase some Seagate HDD, and felt a regret. as they are quite noisy.
I would go for WD red, when I get new HDD.
I’m personally avoiding WD due to their various issues. First there was the whole SMR thing where they were selling SMR drives as “NAS drives” without telling anyone, and more recently they were flagging drives with a warning just because they had been in use for three years: theverge.com/…/western-digital-three-years-warnin…
They make good drives and used to be the best, but as a company they’re kinda sketchy and I’d rather not give them my money. I’d rather trust the Seagate Exos or Ironwolf Pro drives since they haven’t tried doing anything sketchy like WD have.
They are sitting in the basement, noise is not a concern. Why WD red?
Then i would go for Seagate IronWolf Pro ST20000NE000 256MB 20TB, and save 13%. (non pro stop at 12TB)
IronWolf® Pro drives are engineered to deliver 24×7 performance, reliability, and dependability in multi-bay, multi-user commercial and enterprise RAID storage solutions.
If noise was a concern, they are noticeable quieter. WD Red Pro 22TB Hard Drive, NASCompares
yote_zip@pawb.social 1 year ago
IMO just get whatever the cheapest one is of those big manufacturers. You should be running some sort of redundancy for your disks anyway, and disk failures are always a gamble no matter what you do to pre-emptively stop them. Personally I buy cheap refurbished drives and throw them into my RAID with the foregone conclusion that I might need to replace them sooner than a new drive, but I’m also saving so much money by buying refurbished that replacement cost will be cheap. Check ebay or ServerPartDeals if you subscribe to this line of thinking.
MaggiWuerze@feddit.de 1 year ago
Never found such a dealer for germany
olizet@lemmy.works 1 year ago
Well, I did:
www.servershop24.de/komponenten/…/hdds/
bier@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year ago
I also bought one exist 18tb refurbished from those guys working great www.jb-computer.de/komponenten-zubehoer/…/hdd/
Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com 1 year ago
Check out eBay, I’m finding lots of like 3TB disks for cheap.
TheButtonJustSpins@infosec.pub 1 year ago
Bookmarked; thanks!