What Hard Drives Should you Buy for your Synology NAS?

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2024
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Комментарии • 273

  • @Erin-Thor
    @Erin-Thor 2 года назад +69

    I’ve had several Seagate drives fail, and warranty replacement is fought. Yes, they will replace them but will question you and make you work for it. It’s as if they offer a warranty only to those serious enough to push back, thinking it will save them money. The opposite is true for me, I try and NEVER recommend Seagate drives to any client unless they demand it.

    • @zainahmed6258
      @zainahmed6258 2 года назад +2

      Thanks but what do you recommend? I was looking at newer EXOS 7E10 8tb drives from home NAS.

    • @Erin-Thor
      @Erin-Thor 2 года назад +11

      @@zainahmed6258 -- I should admit I have a few running Seagate's and the clients are happy, but they have had zero failures. I prefer WD or Toshiba.
      Edit: If you get Seagate's, ask the client or end user to purchase them themselves, not you, and strongly suggest they print hardcopies of all receipts, every charge record, photos of the install, Amazon Receipts, installation notes, etc., put them in an envelope and tape them to the bottom of the NAS. And also write the date of warranty expiration on the envelope. If the drives have different purchase dates or sources, do the same with a sharpie on the drive before installation. Not joking, Seagate will argue with you about everything, THAT drive is older and out of warranty (Date sold to the vendor not end user), THAT drive was not sold to you but whatever the reseller's name was. The hours I have spent tracking down, printing, emailing, etc. receipts for customers would boggle your mind. And on 2 clients behalf, I just purchased another drive and gave up on Seagate support as it just wasn't worth it (but the client was worth keeping happy).

    • @zainahmed6258
      @zainahmed6258 2 года назад +7

      @@Erin-Thor Very strange how internet is divided. I found out the WD has lost its spot and is now producing less reliable drives which break unexpectedly. Seagate EXOS is the way to go. I would prefer Toshiba but only one retailer in Australia has some in stock and they are N300 6tb for $320. When you say WD then which WD and which Toshiba? At the moment i can only afford upto 8tb of space which is plenty for me for storing photos and family videos. Currently EXOS 8tb 7E10 are on sale for $299 same as Toshiba N300 6tb and Ironwolf (not pro) 8tb.

    • @zainahmed6258
      @zainahmed6258 2 года назад +4

      @@Erin-Thor Thank you for sharing such valuable experience. I am just getting into the world of NAS and I know its going to be one expensive one down the line 🙂

    • @alwynsmit3546
      @alwynsmit3546 Год назад +5

      Yeah, I've had 2 WD drives crash in the last 2 months. My 2nd crashed this afternoon. I'm done with WD

  • @BFArch0n
    @BFArch0n Год назад +9

    I have over 16 Seagate 16TB Exos drives for my 2 NAS machines.....1 died and I submitted an RMA with Seagate...BACK IN JULY 2023, it is not well into October, I have no replacement, when I contact them they say they are "out of stock" and will replace "soon", and this goes on over and over again. Their warranty has no deadline, how is this legal? They still sell the drives on Amazon and Newegg, always in stock there, they should just send me a check to purchase a new drive if that's the case, this is ridiculous!
    Because of this, I never want to purchase another Seagate product again, what good is a warranty if they never honor it!?!?! I no longer have a cold spare on hand if another drive fails!

  • @enzyme86
    @enzyme86 6 дней назад

    I've had SGT and WD fail on me, so I started buying Hitachi and Toshiba. After the takeover of Hitachi by WD, I'm now exclusively on Toshiba. Love them.

  • @RogerC68
    @RogerC68 2 года назад +23

    I recently purchased the DS920+ and love it!! I started off 6 years ago with the base WD cloud drive and was always disappointed with the speed. You get what you pay for I guess. When they announced they were ending the security updates early this year I was fuming!! So I started shopping for another unit and determined not to ever buy a WD NAS again. I found Synology, and LOVE the speed! I have 2x 6TB WD Black hard drive and it works really great. Thanks for your videos and I may hire you one day when I want to upgrade my system. Thanks again.

    • @zgboy23
      @zgboy23 2 года назад

      WD cloud is BS. I transformed my wd cloud mirror to xpenology and still using this device like synology NAS.

  • @npapan
    @npapan 2 года назад +29

    Hi Rex , I have a DS420+ and I have filled it up with Toshiba N300 drives (PN starts with HDWG4xxUZSVA) which are probably the same as the Synology branded ones. Also they tend to have more Toshibas in the compatibility list than the others. They were also cheaper than the WD Pro and Seagate Pro… Firmware was 0601 as Synology recommended.

  • @blazel462
    @blazel462 3 месяца назад +3

    Seagate has sales on their website from time to time.
    That’s how I wound up with 4 14TB IronWolf Pros for my first nas experience. In a Qnap ts-473a.
    Awesome so far!

  • @Mark-hp5rm
    @Mark-hp5rm 2 года назад +3

    Advice & Assistance: Hello, I currently have a DS920+ Nas with 4, 4TB drives, and Synology RAM DDR4-2666 Non-ECC SO-DIMM 4GB (D4NESO-2666-4G) . My RAID configuration is SHR1.
    I'm looking to replace/upgrade one of the drives to a 16TB. When I went to purchase, I saw 2 different kinds and wanted to insure I get what is compatible with the other 3 remaining drives.
    Descriptions:
    Current drives - Seagate IronWolf Pro 4TB NAS Internal Hard Drive HDD - 3.5 Inch SATA 6Gb/s 7200 RPM 128MB Cache for RAID Network Attached Storage, Data Recovery Service - Frustration Free Packaging (ST4000NE001)
    Replacement options - Seagate IronWolf Pro 16TB NAS Internal Hard Drive HDD - CMR 3.5 Inch SATA 6GB/S 7200 RPM 256MB Cache for Raid Network Attached Storage, Data Recovery Rescue Service
    Or
    Seagate IronWolf Pro 16TB Enterprise NAS Internal HDD Hard Drive - CMR 3.5 Inch SATA 6Gb/s 7200 RPM 256MB Cache for RAID Network Attached Storage, Rescue Services - FFP g (ST16000NTZ01)
    I will eventually replace/upgrade all the remaining drives. What’s the difference, and which should I choose to go with in your opinion?
    Thanking you in advance

  • @m4nc1n1
    @m4nc1n1 2 года назад +11

    I just bought eight 14TB WD Red CMR drives for $279 ea on Amazon. Excellent price. I usually get Iron Wolf Reds, but I was filling a DS1821+ and could not pass up the $279. It is nice to have 86TB of space :). I also upgraded my Synologys to 16GB RAM, 1TB m.2 caches, and a 10G NIC. I also use the 1621+ with 8TB Iron Wolfs as a NAS backup for important files on the 1821. The new project I just finished is a TrueNAS box with a 12400k, 64GB DDR5 RAM, ROG B660-I MB, four 16TB Exos Drives, JONSBO N1 case, Asus 10G NIC, and a 750w SFF PSU! It is a gorgeous NAS!

    • @ESHIELDS
      @ESHIELDS 10 месяцев назад +5

      Damn, that's a lot of porn!

  • @UMfan21
    @UMfan21 2 года назад +3

    I have a DS918+ with Ironwolfs and just built a DS910+ with Exos. Both have been flawless so far.

  • @wfp9378
    @wfp9378 2 года назад +6

    Toshiba N300s for me. Replacing all my seagates and WDs. Actually cheaper for me too. Glad to know that Synology is rebranding the Toshibas but the price hike for their logo is a bit off. Just get the Toshibas and not the Synology logo ones.

  • @Wistbacka
    @Wistbacka Год назад +2

    I have 4x seagate barracuda drives. 2 of them are in my system in Raid 1, and the 2 others are hard backup copies that I use to backup the two in the system whenever I add/remove major amount of files. These are stored on a shelf in a dry, cool and dark place. So far this has worked fine.

    • @Haiyami
      @Haiyami Год назад +1

      Be warned that Barracuda drives have issues as they aren't properly being read by software for drive health. I've had multiple drives that either clicked or took a long time to start spinning show as excellent health only to fail with no warning. When monitoring drive health I've never had issues with Western Digital.

  • @1stpanda3903
    @1stpanda3903 2 года назад +15

    I started out using an IBM 360 , IBM 370 , and later, an IBM System 3. Yep, a Jurassic Park of the 1970s. Throughout that time until now, I haven't seen anyone be so fucused and so honest for everyone who is watching the video. I have listened to great advice from former MICROSOFT people who always have been available to great things. Your time in explaining everyting in NAS is honorable and very appreciated. I hope others understand why. Tute, si rece vixeris. If John Lennon
    was a techie, he would love this. Thanks!

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      Thanks!

    • @oranaz551
      @oranaz551 Год назад

      Lol fortran for the win :) started off running a IBM 360 moved up to a 360/40.back in the stone age

    • @DrivingPhilippines
      @DrivingPhilippines 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@oranaz551old timers unite! 360 with REXX and COBOL, assembler. Then as400, then z series. Good old days! Now relaxing by the beach 😊

  • @GrantSR
    @GrantSR Год назад +5

    I'm old enough to remember about two major scandals for each major HDD manufacturer. Every time, they tried to hide it from customers. It's practically SOP for the industry.

  • @TrueToad
    @TrueToad 2 года назад +3

    Seagate IronWolf is my go-to for Synology. I purchased 8 10TB Ironwolf drives for a project, and about one year later 6 drives began to show sector errors. I contacted Seagate - they covered replacements, and in fact, I received 12TB replacements, Seagate stated they were out of 10TB drives. I paid to ship the failed drives and Seagate paid for the shipping to me.
    100% satisfied with Seagate. Side Note: the 6 drives that were failing all were within 100 serial numbers, so it must have been a bad lot.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +1

      Great to know! I have had the same experience when I have had to do an RMA

  • @martinh5114
    @martinh5114 10 месяцев назад +2

    On the topic of SMR drives: It can also lead to a RAID failure when there's not enough free storage left. Happened to me and I changed all my WD Reds to Ironwolf after WD had to admit that some of their WD Red models were SMR drives.

  • @pietschreuder5047
    @pietschreuder5047 2 года назад +4

    I own a Synology 416 Play which is an update from the 411j. I migrated the drives in 2017 from the 411 to the 416, so I still use the same four WD20EARS 2TB for about 10 years! Never seen one fault report from SMART. My NAS is configured in BTRFS with snapshot, RAID 5, local backup and critical backup in the cloud, so whenever a drive fails, I wil replace them one by one.

  • @ColinDyckes
    @ColinDyckes 2 месяца назад

    I'm running 5 x 16TB IronWolf Pros in RAID6 in my latest Synology 1522+. Same price as the EXOS as that capacity at the moment. I've had great success with the IWPs in the past, plus you get warranty direct with the manufacturer rather than the distributor!

  • @HappyBuddhaBoyd
    @HappyBuddhaBoyd 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have always used Ironwolf NAS and have never had a problem. Currently, I am thinking of changing to Exos because they have the same specs and you get a much longer life for the money.

  • @dorkasaurusbecks
    @dorkasaurusbecks 2 года назад +4

    I went with 5 16TB Seagate EXOs in my Synology 1520+ in Raid 6 few months ago (1st time buyer). The noise isn't bad but its a lil strange hearing a light knocking or spinning up sound out of the blue. If you're able to keep your NAS in another room you'll never notice it. I can't do that with my apartment but I've gotten used to it. Unless they die on me anytime soon, I'd buy them again.

  • @marinoscotoni9382
    @marinoscotoni9382 2 года назад +10

    Thanks for your comparison, you have great videos, very informative. I had a Synology RS2016 and changed 7 out of 12 Western Digital Red drives. I have switched to the Ironwolf 10Tb since 3 years that are working extremely well in a Synology 1019. Keep up the good work.

    • @Dakhor
      @Dakhor 2 года назад +2

      I have the opposite experience - 4 ironwolf drives failed within 6 months of purchase - replacements started failing also so returned them and got my money back. Running WD Red 8 TB fine for 2 years now.

  • @StardustOneReviews
    @StardustOneReviews 2 года назад +3

    When you buy a Seagate 5TB 2.5 inch external USB enclosure, you will find a very low power consumption and very silent Seagate Barracuda 2.5 inch SATA drive in it. These drives have 600000 load/unload cycles. You will find exactly the same in each external enclosure from Seagate. Combine 4 x 5TB in a 4 bay NAS and you get 15 TB of storage :-). Very silent, low power consumption and also very lightweight.

  • @radiospank
    @radiospank Год назад +3

    i got those seagate exos and I think they are just fine sound wise.

  • @JevVan
    @JevVan Год назад +2

    I worked as a PC Technician in the late 80s and again in the mid 90s. I know it's a long time ago, but I saw significantly less failures of WD Drives than Seagate. Couple that with the only HD Failure I've ever had was a Seagate. So I stopped used them completely by 2000. I've never had a failure since. While other people I know who are in particular or Seagate fans are regularly telling me their stories of HDD failures.

  • @Ramserik
    @Ramserik 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for great explanation. Your way to explain is so detailed and I love it.
    My firt NAS was configured by your tutorial. I really love your channel and subcribed immediatly. You do very valuable content. Keep doing what you doing man.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      Thanks man! Really glad you like it!

  • @MatthewMorseCA
    @MatthewMorseCA 2 года назад +18

    Good comparison review and discussion. The amazing reliability and MTBF with the EXOS drives vs. IronWolf is worth any complaint of a little extra dB for the longer lifespan. I switched to using EXOS for my DS2419+II which is simply worth the TCO value over time to know my NAS array will have solid uptime and performance. Honestly, the 12 EXOS drives spinning 24/7 isn't more noticeable audibly than my primary workstation at my desk. iPerf3 tests show I'm reliably getting 8-9Gbps over the 10Gb NIC copper; definitely the better performer when doing Virtual Machines or Docker containers and especially for real-time video/photo editing. But the most important question, "What's your data worth to you?" My Best Disk Buying Tips: 1) Always buy the best you can afford 2) Don't short-change the value of your data when shopping for storage 3) Always buy N+1 cold spare drive (if your data integrity and up-time matters to you when the $h!t hits the fan) 4) Buy with intent for reliability of devices to fail... nothing is perfect, so build into RAID 5 or 6 (best) and plan for (at least) one drive to eventually fail over time, 5) Try to buy matched drives by type and capacity. Mixing drives and using dynamic RAID formats is nice, but nothing beats a RAID 5/6 with matched capacity for speed and reliability. Lastly, I also try to buy disks in mixed batches so that I can have some drives from different production runs (think QA control to offset any disks that might have a repetitive mfg issue.)

  • @RetBaron
    @RetBaron 9 месяцев назад

    I am very satisfied with DS920+ with 4 pieces of WD 18TB Gold (WD181KRYZ). Running 24/7/365 fifth year.

  • @ZakiWasik
    @ZakiWasik Год назад +2

    Just did a quick price check and at the time of writing a 16TB Synology drive is more than twice the price of an Ironwolf Pro in my market.

  • @jologo18
    @jologo18 20 дней назад

    Very informative. Surprised at your recommendation for Seagate as I thought WD had a better reputation generally- but as a home user considering an NAS, the Synology brand Toshiba drives make the most sense.

  • @XouZ88
    @XouZ88 9 месяцев назад +1

    IronWolf was my choice also when I first got into NAS, it's still what I have

  • @12121-u
    @12121-u 10 месяцев назад

    Over the years I collected a box with broken stuff, all my failed had’s are inside. So there is 4 Seagate, 1 Toshiba that is totally my fault since I dropped it and 1 WD. Swore to myself never use Seagate, so since 2017-18 been using only WD and up to now had 0 troubles.

  • @liugeorge4670
    @liugeorge4670 2 года назад +2

    I am a small business user with DS 1621xs+, I would not buy Synology HDD unless they drop their price to keep in line with other brands. CMR sata 7200rpm exos

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +1

      Yeah, I really hope they do not bring the Synology hard drive recommendation down to the smaller units!

  • @rajahdoha
    @rajahdoha 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the SMR & CMR topic, Its Helpful

  • @MaxxPainII
    @MaxxPainII 2 года назад +1

    May years ago my work used Seagate drives all the time, but most of them failed including the replacements. So Seagate left a bad impression for me. I've stuck with WD and have been happy. I do notice my WD Red drives in my Synology 918 are a tad noisy at times for my home office. I have 6 Synology units with WD drives, all have been working great.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +2

      I have heard similar things from guys who worked with Segate 10-15 years ago! seems like they have gotten themselves together but its hard to get that kind of a bad taste out of your mouth

    • @mantasvilkelis2224
      @mantasvilkelis2224 Год назад +1

      @@SpaceRexWill I had so many problems with seagate 10+ yers ago, but for the past 5 years we are using in the studio heavily seagate ironwolf hdd and never had (knock on a wood) any issues

    • @maxxomega6599
      @maxxomega6599 Год назад

      It's weird and goes through cycles. I had SO many problems with WD Drives, especially Raptors. Switched to Seagate with no problems...

  • @jenniferw8963
    @jenniferw8963 Год назад +2

    I just bought a synology DS1522+ (from Amazon) along with 3 used Seagate EXOS 14TB HDD from ebay ($115 a piece). I installed the three drives in the 1522 and it says they aren't on compatibility list. I used them anyways but I don't know if I should replace them with another drive or not.. something on the compatibility list. I don't see why they wouldn't be on the list as they are enterprise NAS HDD's. The drives I got are the ST14000NM000G.

  • @softwareengineer9435
    @softwareengineer9435 2 года назад +3

    Such great review once again.

  • @briankwok3636
    @briankwok3636 9 месяцев назад +1

    Who still miss Maxtor drives, my favourite brand of HDDs ever

  • @williamearlephotography
    @williamearlephotography 11 месяцев назад

    Love your channel and I'm learning a lot. I wanted to share a recent experience with Seagate Ironwolf 12TB hard drives. I ordered five drives for a new Synology DS1522+ and three of the five were dead on arrival. They did not work at all. I've been using a DS716+ for about six years with Western Digital hard drives and have experienced zero problems. I'm going with five Western Digital drives to replace the Seagate drives. BTW, I did move them around in the NAS confirming that it's not the NAS. The NAS was making strange beeping sounds and the green drive lights never came on for the defective drives. The Seagate drives were also deeply discounted at B&H Photo so I'm suspecting they were off spec or something similar.

  • @VirtualTourPhotographer
    @VirtualTourPhotographer Год назад +3

    I've chosen to go with Toshiba Enterprise drives and they have been both best value and very good performance. The fact that it's who Synology uses, should make them an obvious choice.

    • @serdar-ors
      @serdar-ors 8 месяцев назад

      how is their sound ? i think 14TB toshiba. i have ironwolf pro 14tb and it is high when writing.

    • @VirtualTourPhotographer
      @VirtualTourPhotographer 8 месяцев назад

      @@serdar-ors not that bad but I also have them in a case with acoustic dampening and away from my desk.

    • @serdar-ors
      @serdar-ors 8 месяцев назад

      @@VirtualTourPhotographer acoustic dampening , interesting. thanks.

  • @alexshdvideo
    @alexshdvideo 4 месяца назад

    I use ultra stars formerly hgst (hitachi) now purchased by western digital. Still better than the rest of WD line

  • @fantasticjack10
    @fantasticjack10 2 года назад +2

    Personal experience - Ironwolf was really good at first but it seems companies build a name, then make worse stuff relying on the name, then release a new series. I had been recommending ironwolf, but the last couple of years, for me at least, have been poor. 2 DOA and the replacements failed in two years. Total failures were 3. My ironwolf drives from the first few years are still running.
    My first two wd reds had a good run, but the ones after not so great. Running HGST at home, with one Toshiba I had to get because there were no other drives available that wasn't 3x the price in the middle of the pandemic and I had a wd red failure. Personally, never had a hgst fail. We'll see what happens going forward.
    Again just my experience. Also I find backblaze's reports interesting.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      Where are you buying from?

    • @fantasticjack10
      @fantasticjack10 2 года назад

      @@SpaceRexWill @SpaceRex BH photo, "Shipped and Sold from Newegg," and Microcenter. The replacements were under manufacturer warranty.

  • @xTheYeTiChannel
    @xTheYeTiChannel 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for the video thats great information!

  • @peterloader974
    @peterloader974 2 года назад +2

    Just bought two 4TB Seagate Ironwolf's a week ago to replace a failing WD 6TB drive in my Synology DS215J, which now employs Raid. Happy with them.

  • @jmanko
    @jmanko Год назад

    I only buy reds for my storage. I have external enclosure WD units that have been going strong for multiple years where I'm constantly writing data to them (security camera footage). But I also have backups for these units just because I know they will fail. Plus the warranty is normally shorter than buying reds directly.

  • @Haiyami
    @Haiyami Год назад +5

    I've never had good luck with Seagate drives. Their drives have always failed. When showing hard drive health via multiple different health check software. it would always show in excellent or good condition but then completely die on me without warning. All the western digital drives I've had have properly shown drive health on when hey are reaching poor condition. Because I've had multiple seagates fail on me I will never buy them again.

  • @mrdali67
    @mrdali67 9 месяцев назад

    If you are setting up a larger NAS (4 and more slots) and are starting out with say 3 10TB disks so you make a raid 5 on that, and a year ahead you have the money to fill the NAS up to the maximum of say 6 drives. Now you can get the same drives in a 20tb version. So what is best .. keep the 3x10 and just make a new 3x20 or expand the 1st one to 6x10 and make a new 3x10 on the bigger disks ? on the one solution you get 3 disks on each array and each disk only serves 1 array, on the 2'nd You get 1 bigger array spread on 6 disk but 3 of the disks servers 2 arrays and will obviously have more reads/writes that will lower their overall performance (my logic). I'm leaning to the one were each disk only serves 1 array, but at some point evening out all the disk sizes would propably be the best but also most expensive solution. Not ALL will have the money right away to fill up a 4bay NAS with 4x22tb which I think is the current max size, but most likely the sizes of disks will keep going up about once a year so this is kinda a cartwheel you can keep running on untill the NAS or disks dies 🙃

    • @thomashinna6370
      @thomashinna6370 8 месяцев назад

      I did the mistake to fill up my 5-bay Synology NAS with 3TB and 4TB drives when I bought it a few years ago. Now, I’m out of space and stuck with no more room for expanding. I could replace some of the current drives with 8TB or 12TB drives (depending on what I can afford). But then I have no use for the current drives anymore so they will be wasted. Maybe a better option could be to buy the extension cabinet and fill it with only a couple of new drives.

    • @mrdali67
      @mrdali67 8 месяцев назад

      @@thomashinna6370 Ya it depends how many money you have, even spinners arent too expensive, I mean even a 20tb Exos isn't too bad, but 5 off em it sums up well, and dependent what sizes you have already and you buy one larger, you need a place to move your data to while you build a larger raid

  • @williamhicks2763
    @williamhicks2763 Год назад +1

    I’d really like someone to test the startup draw on these NAS and Enterprise drives. As your NAS gets older and the drives get bigger they put more strain on the power supply, which is usually not got much headroom. My power supply went out after placing a 16TB Toshiba in my fifth slot, that I had never used before. Synology basically said that the drives I had migrated to over the years were probably drawing too much power. Some of the large server manufacturers, like 45Drives, have a feature where the drives will start up sequentially to reduce that initial spike. This is a feature I’d like to see in the smaller NAS systems. I could find nothing about startup current on any of the manufacturers websites.

  • @jigsound
    @jigsound 2 года назад +1

    Went with EXOS. Let's see how it goes! 😎

    • @zainahmed6258
      @zainahmed6258 2 года назад +1

      how is it going so far?

    • @jigsound
      @jigsound 2 года назад +1

      @@zainahmed6258 It's going without any problems so far. I'm using three 18-TB disks per an SHR1 volume with a nominally 10Gbit/s computer interface, getting read speeds between 300 MB/s and 1 GB/S, depending on whether the installed M.2 SSD cache can be utilized.
      - Eero

    • @zainahmed6258
      @zainahmed6258 2 года назад +1

      @@jigsound Thanks man. I have just placed an order for two 8tb Exos for personal NAS. I haven't bought a NAS yet for personal photos and videos. Any recommendations? DS218, DS220+ etc?

    • @jigsound
      @jigsound 2 года назад +1

      @@zainahmed6258 Glad to help! 😊 My only experience, as of yet, is with DS1821+, of which I bought two units (one for working directly off it and the other for HyperBackup). Working without problems so far. 👍

  • @Mcfoxter
    @Mcfoxter Год назад +3

    Another in depth review. Thanks so much! How do you know if your WD drives are either CMR or SMR?

  • @graemequinn3710
    @graemequinn3710 2 года назад +6

    Perfect timing for your video! I’ve just picked up a Synology DS1621+ to replace my old Drobo, I was just beginning to look at what hard drives I should purchase to populate my DS1621+. My Drobo has original older 3TB and 4TB WD Red drives (CMR) but I need larger capacity drives to go in my Synology to have enough space to migrate my data across. Would the Seagate Ironwolf or Exos be my best options then, also what would NVMe SSD would you recommend for use in the 1621+ as a cache?

    • @MatthewMorseCA
      @MatthewMorseCA 2 года назад +1

      Either the IronWolf or Exos are fantastic options. I chose Exos for the extra MTBF reliability and data center proven spindles. The Samsung Evo Pro SSDs are the best out there, but depending on your use of the Synology DS1621+ you may not see much performance gain with the file transfers as if you would by adding the 10Gb NIC card. I have both upgrades and found the NVMe cache has done little to accelerate my R/W performance for normal file sharing/transfers. If using the DS for VM's or Docker then yes, adding the SSD cache would be helpful.

    • @graemequinn3710
      @graemequinn3710 2 года назад

      @@MatthewMorseCA Thanks for the reply. I've settled on using Seagate Exos drives as my main storage and just waiting on them going on special offer before ordering. Is it worth going with the Samsung 970 Pro over the Evo Plus? I'm guessing it's to do with lifespan of the drive (Read/Write) and overall drive performance?

  • @andreasoberg2021
    @andreasoberg2021 2 года назад +1

    I have Exos and they are loud. When they are searching you hear these strong TOK TOK TOK. I can even hear it downstairs in the floor below. Otherwise they work great.

  • @drewbizdev
    @drewbizdev 10 месяцев назад

    I'm sharing this on a couple of different video comments: I still use Western digital, but I acquired a certain standard for many different devices, and once certain qualities came into question, (For instance) ...I for the past 10 years, only buy Western digital Gold drives. They are Data Center quality and in 10 years I have NEVER had one go bad. ...Just say'in. - P.S.: I do NOT use SMR. SMR drives are not even allowed in the front door.

  • @VegasMadMikey
    @VegasMadMikey Год назад +1

    Timely video for me. I’m buying a 1522+. I used the drive selector and decided on these but they are not listed on the synology compatible list. Should this be ok or should I find another!! Seagate IronWolf Pro 4TB NAS Internal Hard Drive HDD - 3.5 Inch SATA 6Gb/s 7200 RPM 128MB Cache for RAID Network Attached Storage, Data Recovery Service - Frustration Free Packaging (ST4000NE001)

  • @danyelg92
    @danyelg92 2 года назад +1

    Hi very informative info on synology and i have one and like synology. I was trying to upgrade and have offsite backup and this month got super great discount on 16Tb Exos, they were on 42% discount at 320 bucks each. So i'm an getting upgrade :), keep up good work.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      Yeah those are crazy cheap and I still can't figure out why

  • @dustojnikhummer
    @dustojnikhummer 2 года назад +1

    Isn't there a risk of external drives being SMR? Especially since base WD Red are SMR

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +1

      Yes! With shucking drives you really want to put in some work to make sure you get good drives if you can

  • @doctorkj5640
    @doctorkj5640 2 года назад +2

    Man, your videos are top notch and really helpful. I was set to buy 2x8TB WD REDs but now I'm considering Seagate Ironwolf (or Ironewolves bacause I need two of them :-) Good work indeed.
    I will forgive you your taste in shirts and sometimes weird almost-out-of breath way of speaking :-).

  • @Killertamagotchi
    @Killertamagotchi 9 месяцев назад

    It is also not uncommon for USB hard drives to simply have recertified hard drives installed instead of completely new ones.
    Recertified are hard drives that were sent back to e.g. Seagate, WD etc. due to a defect or other reasons, then checked and/or repaired, the SMART entries were reset and then reused.
    I once had 2 USB hard drives, both of which were from WD, where the USB controller was defective, but the hard drive was still OK and I removed it and the sticker on it said Recertified

  • @EdwardChamberlain
    @EdwardChamberlain 6 месяцев назад

    Bought a 920 plus about a year ago. Started with WD 2Tb drives. Now have two WD 20Tb drives installed. Just purchased two more identical WD 20Tb drives, and Synology software won't let them initialize. There is a workaround using SSH, but I hesitate without instruction. This is like removing car features after purchase, and it's not right. Unable to add more data, and stuck at 86 percent.

  • @Chazwozel1
    @Chazwozel1 2 года назад +3

    So I've got an Ironwolf 4 TB. My main concern has been that I've got it partitioned with 1 TB dedicated to Surveillance station. I know that Skyhawks are better for camera footage. In your opinion are the Ironwolfs ok to use as dual purpose for NAS use AND cameras? I'm debating whether or not to buy another Synology (mine only has two bays) with four bays, two of which I could dedicate for Cameras with a Skyhawk.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +2

      I would not worry about it! Ironwolfs are still rated for very high work loads!

    • @Chazwozel1
      @Chazwozel1 2 года назад +1

      @@SpaceRexWill Thanks!

  • @BornRiders
    @BornRiders Год назад

    Thanks Rex, I'm going with Synology Ironwolf drives!

  • @ejharrop1416
    @ejharrop1416 2 года назад +2

    Thank you and I will have to look for some cheap stand alone drives to harvest. I have an older six bay Synology NAS with. 2 empty slots, that should not be a big risk. Do you have any concerns? I am not too tech savvy but am willing to experiment. Cheers.

  • @uria702
    @uria702 10 месяцев назад

    Wd red for em all the way. Luckily, we haven’t had any server yet that requires those Synology drives.

  • @CAIDMASTEROFPYRO
    @CAIDMASTEROFPYRO 2 года назад +1

    I bought a drive to shuck for less than half the price of the drive bought separately, it's still going, super slow drive though i imagine that is why it ended up in an enclosure

  • @prowler1567
    @prowler1567 2 года назад

    Thanks for the info on HDs. Someday I may replace my current (DS1019+) Synology NAS but not anytime soon. I probably will replace drives before the NAS unit itself.

  • @sctexan5392
    @sctexan5392 Год назад

    Is it better to buy large drives if you have a LOT to store? Thinking for backup....25TB of current storage (approx), I'm thinking using the NAS ability to self back-up the data.

    • @Francois424
      @Francois424 Год назад +1

      Either buy one of the largest if enough (for your 25gb not yet, maybe near September if you're willing to wait for the 26+gb HDDs to FINALLY be released to the market)
      Or go raid5 with at least 4 drives and just scale as much as you need. Raid 5 can rebuild all your backup if any of it's constituent drive goes bad. Making your backups Ironclad. All for the cost of losing ONE drive that will keep your data safe. Dont go Raid0 tho as I mentioned earlier, as if any of your drives goes dead, you lose everything, even if just ONE out of X goes bad.
      Personally, If I was getting a DS1522+ I would stuff it with 5x WD Red Plus drives, probably the 14TBs (so 4x14 = 56TB - fifth dive is for data parity)
      I am building my raid from 4HDD in my new computer tho and most likely am going for the 22gb drive if I can get a good deal, so 66tb for me.
      As I said, I will never lose my data unless I get a catastrophic failure of that PC. I would still save the most important data on another external backup drive tho, just in case, but a single drive would be enough for that.
      Good luck !

  • @Prod-23
    @Prod-23 Год назад +2

    TOP TIPS ...
    Don't buy all your hard drives from the same shop at the same time.
    Spread it out and hope they're from different batches.

  • @PowerPlayPros
    @PowerPlayPros 6 месяцев назад

    I am planning to purchase synology 2 bay nas but on their website in compatibility HDD support for seagate is ST16000VN001 so my question is, can I go with ST16000NT001

  • @WilliamRomba
    @WilliamRomba 2 месяца назад

    Will, so did you purchase the EXOS drives and how did you get around the compatible firmware version Synology requires which is SN02 for the 16TB drives since they appear to only be available with SN03 or SN04? You are correct that they are less expensive than the IronWolf / Pro.

  • @vardagsteknik6576
    @vardagsteknik6576 2 года назад +1

    Is't Toshiba getting hot? I have WD red and they worked for years, non smr.

  • @jasonhall9364
    @jasonhall9364 8 месяцев назад

    Not sure if this is a HDD or NAS question. I’m looking to set up a NAS that will be part file storage, part Plex server and in the near future a surveillance NVR. Could I/should I use IronWolf Pros for the file storage and Plex server RAIDs and a NVR class drive for the NVR or should I use IronWolf Pros for the entire NAS?

  • @fin3125
    @fin3125 2 года назад

    New Video, if you don't have it. I have a DS920 with 4TB drives in all bays on RAID 5. It is 90% full. I want to replace the drives with 16TB. Can I do it by swapping out a drive in the RAID one at a time?

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      Yes you can. Make sure to first backup your crucial data just in case something happens as if a disk failed while the NAS was being rebuilt you would lose the volume.

  • @FreestylerAlbert
    @FreestylerAlbert 2 года назад +7

    I got the 6x10 TB IronWolf Pro. Exos is CRAZY loud compare to Ironwolf Pro. (IronWolf pro is also kinda loud)

    • @MatthewMorseCA
      @MatthewMorseCA 2 года назад +1

      I've run both and defaulted to Exos for the better MTBF and data center reliability. With 12-drives the dB isn't anything louder than my core workstation, and you can set the DS fan controls on many Synology NAS, too.

    • @FreestylerAlbert
      @FreestylerAlbert 2 года назад +2

      @@MatthewMorseCA not the fan what is loud. The thicking sound the HDD gives or read and write. Way freakin loud and anoying. This is why I dont use them anymore.

  • @gvvillanueva6053
    @gvvillanueva6053 Год назад

    how to like storage no need to connect to net ? or always connected to net ? this one like a harddrive in pc because i need to more storage thanks for the answer

  • @Mrkek-sp3ug
    @Mrkek-sp3ug 3 месяца назад

    great info thanks

  • @redumbrella4218
    @redumbrella4218 Год назад

    Great Job! Thanks!

  • @jumpinwired1
    @jumpinwired1 2 года назад +1

    What about Water Panther Arsenal series? I'm trying to stay very, well cheap so I'm thinking about getting a couple "renewed" drives on Amazon.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      As far as I can tell (have looked at those before) they are designed to be OEM clones for business who want to buy a dell, but don’t want to pay dell 4x the cost of the hard drive. I probably would look at something like a cheap Exos before going for those unless there was a really good price reason

  • @aesres
    @aesres 2 года назад +3

    Thank you very much for sharing your thought for once more. I am about to upgrade my DS220j synology to DS920+. Following your info i am about to stop using WD Red and turning into buying two drives Exos X 16-14 TB. What is your opinion about those drives? Is there any big difference with the X18 you suggest? I also checked Synology's list with all the compatible drives and i realized that the disk i am looking for, also the one you suggest are out. Should be safer to buy a little smaller disks as long as i am about to use SHR-1 for the very beginning? and therefore the Ironwolf would me more ideal for me? Thanks

  • @scocassovegetus
    @scocassovegetus Год назад

    What about SSD drives?? I have some of those, but they're not on the synology compatibility list. Samsung 870 evo. 860 is on the list, but not 870.

  • @karenorgan6203
    @karenorgan6203 Год назад

    Seagate Ironwolf 12TB, how are they for acoustics? I'm currently running WD Red Plus 14TB, but in the future I'm looking to leave WD, I saw your other video about flagging early

    • @karenorgan6203
      @karenorgan6203 Год назад

      How do you know if your HDD is SMR? I have a number of WD Red Plus 14TB NAS Hard Disk Drive - 7200 RPM Class SATA 6Gb/s, CMR, 512MB Cache, 3.5 Inch - WD140EFGX

  • @yahlov
    @yahlov Год назад

    somewhere i read that synology switched to seagate for their "own drives" as well
    can someony confirm please

  • @nazarzibilyuk1511
    @nazarzibilyuk1511 Год назад +1

    Strange time happenning. Just bought Exoses into home NAS, just because they are cheaper than Ironwolves, not telling about IronWolf Pro

  • @Iam_ThinK
    @Iam_ThinK 7 месяцев назад

    Never used an Exos drive but I see the price per gig is way lesser than an ironwolf drive or the standard Seagate. I just need them for a plex server migration. Not sure how they'd work in a Plex server. Anyone use them? Any issues?

  • @Attila_G
    @Attila_G Год назад

    There are several models of the IronWolf disks: IronWolf, IronWolf Pro, IronWolf NAS and then those with different transfer rates or Max. Workload Rate. This is quite confusing! I ask myself every time anew, which model I should now use in a Synology NAS.

  • @wilsonlee6091
    @wilsonlee6091 Год назад

    I was going to go with the EXOS drives but I didn't see them on the Synology compatibility list...? Would've been nice to save some $$

  • @jakesells2379
    @jakesells2379 Год назад

    Have you looked at the Exos Mach 2 dual actuator drives? If so, do they work as intended in a Synology NAS?

  • @lrdalucardart
    @lrdalucardart 2 месяца назад +2

    Thank you for justifying my dislike for WD and Seagate.

  • @juancarlosgarcia3025
    @juancarlosgarcia3025 Год назад

    Excellent video, thank you very much, within this world of disks for NAS and its entire metaverse... At the same total capacity in a RAID 5, which is better, many low-capacity disks or few high-capacity disks?
    For use as a home stream of music and use of lightroom, is the use of SSD disks justified instead of HDD?
    Thank you.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  Год назад +1

      I would highly recomend buying a NAS, and leaving a few bays empty. This way you can grow into more space without having to get rid of old hardware

  • @tahirotahir
    @tahirotahir 2 года назад

    Question: The Seagate Exos does not say "NAS" anywhere on them unlike Ironwolf drives, but they are still NAS,?

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +1

      They are actually data center, which supersedes NAS

    • @tahirotahir
      @tahirotahir 2 года назад

      @@SpaceRexWill So these Exos also have those sensors which deflect or manage the harmonic distortion (if I am using my words correctly) which you explained in this or one of your video?

  • @sampk9229
    @sampk9229 Год назад

    can i use one iron wolf and one barraCuda seagate in DS220+ ?

  • @TomaszTwojFotograf
    @TomaszTwojFotograf Год назад

    Thx!
    How about Toshiba HDWG21EUZSVA 14TB?
    If they produce for Synology - and it have the sensor it sould be OK?

  • @cardp17
    @cardp17 2 года назад

    brand new to this and everyone seems to skip over real BASICS. for instance my new 720+ can use ssd drives. so why isnt that an option discussed in this video? bought 2 x 2tb. is that not going to work? thx

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +2

      It will! Just expensive per TB

    • @cardp17
      @cardp17 2 года назад

      @@SpaceRexWill THANK YOU!

  • @marekd3758
    @marekd3758 Год назад

    I am planning to buy Nas. My friend told me that WD are worse than symology. I was considering wd es2 ultra, but it has much worse specs than synology 223 or 224+. Drive will be needed only to backup data, maybe rarely to access the data. Which one should I buy? Which drive should I get? I am trying to understand if synology 223 or 223j will be enough, and I think yes, it will be. Am I correct that more expensive Nas like 224+ are for more professional use? And that they differ only with hardware? What is the difference between 223 and 223j?

  • @MM-jx3rw
    @MM-jx3rw Год назад +1

    What about SSD?

  • @ades788
    @ades788 2 года назад +1

    Hi, what about Samsung QVO ssd?

  • @ArrangingFear56
    @ArrangingFear56 2 года назад +1

    Was about to go with EXOS but a huge sale went on for WDs Ultrastar line so went for that instead, hopefully they can last long enough.

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      Nice! 100% go with where ever the sale is at (esp if they are high quality)

    • @the_bogeyman.
      @the_bogeyman. Год назад

      How are they doing? Noisy?
      I want to buy 4x WD ultrastar 16TB for my nas, they are a lot cheaper than WD gold here lately.

    • @ArrangingFear56
      @ArrangingFear56 Год назад +1

      @@the_bogeyman. occasionally they to make a bit of noise but nothing unacceptable, none of them have failed yet.

    • @the_bogeyman.
      @the_bogeyman. Год назад

      @@ArrangingFear56 thankyou.

  • @rickdent2719
    @rickdent2719 Год назад

    Setting up a new NAS. I currently use an SSD on my laptop and really like it. Is an SSD a good idea for a Synology NAS?

  • @tonyvink961
    @tonyvink961 2 года назад +2

    Recent subscriber... your vids are always worth the time to watch. Can you comment on using the newest and largest hard drives on Synology? I am OK with forgoing tech support on the drive but want to know if a particular drive "should" work. For me specifically I want to use EXOS 18TB drives on a DS1520+. Are there any architectural or size issues that would result in incompatibility? Thanks, Tony

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад +1

      Synology is based on Linux and Linux is able to run with 18 / 20 hard drives no issue so I would say any issue you would run into would actually be synologys fault. That being said I have not tested any sizes larger then 16TB with a synology so I cannot verify it would work (but it should)

    • @tonyvink961
      @tonyvink961 2 года назад

      @@SpaceRexWill Thanks!

  • @VankillaVanil
    @VankillaVanil 2 года назад +1

    Great video 😉💪🍻

  • @michal_szymanski
    @michal_szymanski 10 месяцев назад

    Ok but right now 3x6TB WD RED (WD60EFRX-68MYMN1) and I've to replace one drive in RAID5, can I use Segate IronWolf 6TB and mix HD from different vendors?

  • @andrenilsson8064
    @andrenilsson8064 6 месяцев назад

    Why not the Toshiba N300 pro?

  • @TobiLotta
    @TobiLotta 2 года назад

    im not able to find any suggestions: will 18TB HDDS work with synology?

    • @SpaceRexWill
      @SpaceRexWill  2 года назад

      They will work, but it may complain

    • @TobiLotta
      @TobiLotta 2 года назад

      @@SpaceRexWill what can happen