eBay is FULL of Cheap Hard Drives! What's the Catch?

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @gzzuss
    @gzzuss Год назад +1360

    Impressive how Linus had pass his skills of dropping things to everyone that host videos

    • @thatsawesome2060
      @thatsawesome2060 Год назад +35

      And YT algorithm do their job well to show it to group of people who love falling expensive object

    • @wingedarr0w
      @wingedarr0w Год назад +11

      It is literally written in the script. They have a 'memeable moment' requirement, dropping things is probably one of them.

    • @whollymindless
      @whollymindless Год назад +10

      It's become a corporate policy. I'm going to assume the Toshibas were broken BEFORE the recording. (I have NAS drives with 75,000 hours on them).

    • @engineeringvision9507
      @engineeringvision9507 Год назад

      *Used to work

    • @richardgarrett2792
      @richardgarrett2792 Год назад +7

      job requirement. no fumble, no job.

  • @bricefleckenstein9666
    @bricefleckenstein9666 3 месяца назад

    2:14
    Storj does not "mine" on a hard drive.
    It is a BACKUP setup, similar to a low-budget BACKBLAZE, and those drives often see NO activity for months once they fill up.
    Tends to cause even LESS wear than something like Chia.

  • @bricefleckenstein9666
    @bricefleckenstein9666 Год назад +1

    2:31
    Other than STORJ, pretty much all cryptocoins that are "mined via hard drive" work just find with standard Seagate Archive drives and the later "Shingled Magnetic Recording" drives that both Seagate AND OTHERS have released - and those drives aren't good for much else, as they're CRAZY slow to write to once they fill up the first time.

  • @lukewoodside9420
    @lukewoodside9420 Год назад

    The problem is, and I say this as someone who is qualified to speak on the issue ... This is great for a cheap project to mess around with, however with that being said the drive sizes LTT bought indicate a suggestion to use this as an actual storage cluster.
    I don't tend to disagree with LTT on many things, if anything. However, for the avoidance of all doubt, this is a BAD idea if you intend to store any data you care about. At the end of the day your NAS is your backup, that's why you run your drives in a RAID 10 or RAID 5/6.
    If you want to fire these drives into your desktop to hold your steamapps folder or something you can easily redownload or recreate then fine, but if its something any bit more sentimental or important DO NOT store it on used drives.
    For servers stick with Seagate.

  • @st0nedpenguin
    @st0nedpenguin Год назад +1

    I assume Alex did this video because letting Linus stand next to 7 standing drives was a very bad idea.
    Nevermind.

  • @KermenTheFrog
    @KermenTheFrog Год назад

    The pricing of those used drives is to close for them to be worth it the only used high capacity hard drives I would consider are those from reputable sellers of refurbished enterprise drives

  • @DasBauer
    @DasBauer Год назад +1

    4:55 wow. The European Union really is customer friendly. In here they must take it back for a refund, a repair or a working replacement.

  • @beko1987
    @beko1987 Год назад

    I have 6x 4tb ex server drives a buddy got me! Tens of thousands of hours and a boot count of about 6! Their in my unraid box, with a new 8tb drive as parity and it's been fine for few years now. And they were free!

  • @ViralHeadcase
    @ViralHeadcase Год назад

    3:07 Linus is probably so proud lol!

  • @KX36
    @KX36 Год назад

    Mining for crypto on used hard drives makes a lot of sense. You hear all the time about someone who lost all their crypto on an old hard drive they threw out. Hard drives are made from iron oxide, so you buy up all the hard drives, scrape off the iron oxide and use a proprietary blend of chemicals to refine out the cryotos and melt them down into bitchoins

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395 Год назад +818

    An investigation into old, used SSDs, the prices, drive health, and pros and cons would be really useful.

    • @vgamesx1
      @vgamesx1 Год назад +29

      Generally SSDs are much better, there's no moving parts, so the only thing to likely fail is a dried up capacitor, but that could happen to anything and the NAND itself can fail, but unless you're looking at QLC, most drives are rated at roughly 50-100TB written per 100GB, so aside from defects or farming crypto it would be pretty hard to kill the NAND itself.
      The real problem with used ssds, particularly old ones, is going to be the lack of dram cache and they often aren't all that much cheaper than just buying a new one, at best you're looking at double the storage for the same price but on an older/slower drive for example I've seen the WD SN750 500GB go for $60 new and the SN550 1TB $60 used, that's not bad, but I've seen much worse like older sata drives lacking any dram going for the same price as those two newer WD drives.

    • @Kunu_
      @Kunu_ Год назад +10

      If it is SSDs used to plot chia they will be thrashed. While these HHDs used to store the coins didn't do a lot of read/write the SSDs used to actually plot will have tons.

    • @FlyboyHelosim
      @FlyboyHelosim Год назад +11

      I personally wouldn't trust used SSDs for anything other than content you've got backups of or don't mind losing. As with any solid-state storage devices, they can just die without warning and you don't have the acoustic reporting to tell you if something is wrong.

    • @gblargg
      @gblargg Год назад

      If it's SATA, I've been getting the Samsung 850 Pro from 2016 or so (10 year warranty, so still valid!) and SM863, also from the same era. Those 2-bit MLC V-NAND chips from that time have an amazing endurance, worsening as they added more layers. The SM863 is enterprise so includes power loss protection capacitors.
      As for reliability, all SSDs seem to have some troubling avenues for losing lots of data easily. I stick to just having the OS and applications on it. User files, media, etc. on an HDD. At least the enterprise SSDs probably have more robustness (underprovisioned more for more spare sectors, more solid ECC).

    • @koilamaoh4238
      @koilamaoh4238 Год назад +2

      I see no point in buying used SSDs.. you can get new off brands dirt cheap; which do fairly well, and you don't know how much data was written either, unless specified. SSD do fail once they reach their limit. Plus they are hard to detect when they fail, can die any time; had some good brands die on me before.

  • @TexRobNC
    @TexRobNC Год назад +2009

    That reseller warranty and recertification process is most likely, Step 1: buy a laser engraver Step 2: claim you recertify drives and brand them as such Step 3: offer a warranty, so people feel safe. Tommy Boy said it best.

    • @Gold63Beast
      @Gold63Beast Год назад +94

      He said that there’s proof of recertification when he checked the drives. So their claims of recertification was correct, even for the drives that had listings that didn’t say they were recertified….were actually recertified. Buyers will notice and you won’t be selling them for long. It ain’t that easy anymore.

    • @sultanofsick
      @sultanofsick Год назад +48

      @@Gold63Beast not proof, indications that MAY align with recertifying. Could also just be double pass erasing or something like that.

    • @Gold63Beast
      @Gold63Beast Год назад +20

      @@sultanofsick yeah you May be right but like he said, reputable sellers are selling them and buyers are satisfied. So it doesn’t seem like sellers are actively trying to scam buyers. I think both buyer and seller know the deal, both know the trade-off that’s explained really well in this video.

    • @50shadesofbeige88
      @50shadesofbeige88 Год назад +5

      But it says so ON THE BOX! 🤣

    • @Gurupimp10
      @Gurupimp10 Год назад

      Ebay=Scammers, News? I think not.

  • @andrewbedia
    @andrewbedia Год назад +156

    If you do a follow up, I encourage you to cover usage of tools like badblocks and hard disk sentinel's reinitialize test for burn-in testing drives. In the dozens of new and used drives I have had, it has been very reliable at catching early failures before the ebay money back guarantee/newegg return window closes. None of them that have passed this test have failed before they were re-sold years later, personally. Cheers!

    • @nucleochemist
      @nucleochemist Год назад +10

      HDS is an amazing utility although it does take a long time to learn all the nuances of its different test methods, what types of errors they expose and what they don't. Essential if you care about your data storage or spend time fixing computers a lot.

    • @gorkskoal9315
      @gorkskoal9315 Год назад +2

      Wow! thanks for the tip!

    • @mubok3743
      @mubok3743 Год назад +5

      This 100% badblocks is great, that and something I wish they would of mentioned would be about S.M.A.R.T info tampering

    • @ricsip
      @ricsip Год назад

      @@mubok3743 I wonder how many sellers are experienced to wipe out the SMART data, and reset them back to factory-new-like condition. Because its quite easy to fake a new hard disk if you reset its SMART counters.

  • @swirrllfolfsky9803
    @swirrllfolfsky9803 Год назад +254

    That serverpartdeals seller has always been pretty good in my experience. I've gotten a few 8tb wd enterprise drives from them, and they're always super responsive

    • @ezra1369
      @ezra1369 Год назад +5

      How much??

    • @theironangel767
      @theironangel767 Год назад +11

      @@ezra1369 I just got an offer accepted from serverpartsdeals for 3x 10TB drives @ $76ea - SAS drives tho, SATA might be differently priced.

    • @randomman057
      @randomman057 Год назад +6

      @@theironangel767 SAS drives are meant for enterprise use so they're going to be built better than even prosumer SATA drives for NAS use. Frankly, this video really undersells the longterm reliability of used enterprise hardware. However, SAS requires a bit more knowledge in order to get working in any sort of setup.

    • @draskuul
      @draskuul Год назад +3

      Yeah, I bought 9 of the Exos X18 16GB drives recently. Had 2 failures they replaced, and replacements were good. Both bad ones had failed with uncorrectable sectors during initial testing.

    • @theironangel767
      @theironangel767 Год назад +1

      @@randomman057 Sure does, 2nd hand enterprise is the way to go for a cheap build out. You can get some great deals if you buy irregular format drives and know how to reformat them back to 512b - as long as the drive supports changing their allocation, some are locked, especially SSDs. I got 10x6TB 520-byte drives a few months back for $45 per drive, low writes only a few thousand POH and from late 2018/2019

  • @filpoamati
    @filpoamati Год назад +87

    I can’t wait to see how many he drops them this time

  • @kronoskai2738
    @kronoskai2738 Год назад +237

    Just an inconsistency note: the table at 5:38 indicates that the WD drives indicated all 5 SMART fields of concern, but Alex says right after that it was Seagate who covered all 5 SMART fields of concern, not WD. The screengrab shown when he says this seems to agree with Alex rather than the editor on this one.
    Edit: lots to keep track of in this video, quite a good job overall

    • @Cyberguy42
      @Cyberguy42 Год назад +8

      Good catch

    • @lejoshmont2093
      @lejoshmont2093 Год назад +6

      I have an x16 and can confirm that it reports all 5 SMART data fields.

  • @jakestocker4854
    @jakestocker4854 Год назад +712

    I've gotten some amazing deals on used hard drives. Got like 5-6 Firecuda drives that I'm pretty positive weren't even used. Payed like $10-$20 a piece for 1-2 TB drives.

    • @imnota
      @imnota Год назад +36

      Yeah I was about to get new drives for my nas but I just got a deal for 1tb drives at 11€ a disk shipped. Got 7. So it definitely can be great.
      I have had bad experiences with used drives so not always great. 2 years ago bought 9 500gb drives, on arrival only 6 were working, got a partial refund (ebay is always great with that, even if seller is an ass, ebay will step in and find a solution) and now 2 of the 6 that were left are dying.
      Bought another drive (to replace one of the two that was dying) and the thing literally came in a letter, it works and tests fine but I don't trust it now.

    • @Ollum
      @Ollum Год назад +59

      @@bradhaines3142 🤓

    • @jakestocker4854
      @jakestocker4854 Год назад +5

      @@bradhaines3142 didn't even notice I put payed lol

    • @jakestocker4854
      @jakestocker4854 Год назад +3

      @@imnota it can be hit or miss, that's for sure especially when you find them for sale really cheap. When they're certified refurbished and closer to the market price it's a safer bet but when you find a really good deal I'd basically always consider it a gamble.

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Год назад

      @Jake
      Out with the old in with the new. Everyone wants that high performance of SSD drives, brings new life to even old PCs, like going from HD DVD to Bluray 📀

  • @julius7058
    @julius7058 Год назад +90

    Chia is very lightweight on storage drives. So if the eBay listing specifically states it was dedicated to farm chia it is most likely better than the majority of other used drives out there.

    • @Seris_
      @Seris_ Год назад +12

      Yeah it's actually better on the drives as well as the drives are kept spinning instead of starting/stopping over and over again

    • @CazRaX
      @CazRaX Год назад +22

      @@Schmicky96 Source is knowing how Chia works a drive compared to how a drive is used normally. It isn't a trust me thing, it is just how things work.

    • @cassiankennedy
      @cassiankennedy Год назад +13

      @@Schmicky96 The source is literally this video. They said the same thing.

    • @TheGermanHammer
      @TheGermanHammer Год назад +3

      @@Seris_ Holy shit, are you guys trying to be wrong on purpose? 😂

    • @TheGermanHammer
      @TheGermanHammer Год назад

      Crypto bros clearly don’t understand how an economy functions, so I highly doubt they know a single fucking thing about drive loading and wear.
      Besides Chia is currently worth $28.78USD, so not only is your pretention hilarious, it also highlights how fucking utterly clueless you cryptobros are.

  • @adamkinch9284
    @adamkinch9284 Год назад +73

    I grabbed a whole bunch of Seagate x16 drives that were ex-chia mining for all around $200 a pop, bargain.
    Very glad you guys did this video, helps educate what to look for.
    Fortunately my seller did amazing packaging, but another issue here in Aus is drive on Amazon shipping from US basically loose in a box. Really bad.

    • @bustergundo516
      @bustergundo516 Год назад +3

      Oof. I have how Amazon doesn't ship their items with care. Hope you get your drives in good condition.

  • @TjHall-fw8fd
    @TjHall-fw8fd Год назад +49

    Used to work at a little computer repair shop. We had all kinds of hdds from SSD upgrades that people didn't want. One time a youngster came in with $3. We have him a box and said he could take 10tb he was so happy

    • @jonleibow3604
      @jonleibow3604 Год назад +14

      Ten terabytes for $3, good deal!

    • @quetzalcoa
      @quetzalcoa Год назад +5

      and here i am looking at 8-10tb drives for £120-150...

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 9 месяцев назад +1

      Great

  • @saamyohalder
    @saamyohalder Год назад +57

    Used hard drives are like used condoms: just not worth it and if it fails you're in for a nasty surprise

    • @viper627
      @viper627 Год назад +5

      Well that's an interesting way to put it

    • @RyanVanMaele
      @RyanVanMaele Год назад +2

      Unless you are building large raid arrays where you have fault tolerance. For the price diff you can keep hot and cold spares around.

    • @SevenHunnid
      @SevenHunnid Год назад

      I do food reviews while I’m high off that good tree on my yöutube chånnel 😎

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Год назад

      @@SevenHunnid hello spam

  • @ShooterQ
    @ShooterQ Год назад +80

    For Chia, just writing the final plots to the drives doesn't wear them too greatly, but if they were used as the temp drive to make the plots, then the write amount goes up exponentially.

    • @quantum8522
      @quantum8522 Год назад +11

      Lol no one uses hard drives to plot chia... it's literally not even economically feasible to do so

    • @charnet3d207
      @charnet3d207 Год назад +4

      @@quantum8522 it's not as bad as you think it is. I didn't have the budget for high capacity SSDs coz they're expensive here, but I used multiple HDDs each with its own queue up to what my RAM allowed and they did okey. It wasn't economically feasible when people where farming solo and trying to beat the growing network space, not to mention the declining chia price.

    • @jackykwan8214
      @jackykwan8214 Год назад +1

      @@quantum8522 it is possible in raid SAS drive, but Ramdisk is even better and not harmful as SSD

    • @GiJoe94
      @GiJoe94 6 месяцев назад +3

      I lucked out on some WD Reds that had chia plots but the price was 1/3rd of the original and they had like 300 days total work. For me it just passed the infant mortality stage and it was already pretested lol

  • @TheWhatNotProject
    @TheWhatNotProject Год назад +5

    Come to Australia, where a 16tb drive will cost you $730 Aud, God us Aussies get shafted on electronic prices

  • @IzzyIkigai
    @IzzyIkigai Год назад +28

    Adding to the anecdotes: From my work experience enterprise drives rated for 5 years usually hold up at least 50-60k hours and I'm currently emptying some drives on a personal server that have 72k hours and still run just fine(the server just got superseded). BUT some hard drives just die in the span of a year or two. It really just depends on luck more than anything.

  • @Piketom1
    @Piketom1 Год назад +41

    Even on the fast internet I have, it can take over an hour to download larger games. An inexpensive HDD is a pretty decent solution to keep games stored locally if you are not currently playing them and want to keep the ones you are playing on your SSD.

    • @hi_tech_reptiles
      @hi_tech_reptiles Год назад +4

      A Steam Cache is useful too. It's like a separate little server that you download games locally from instead. Pretty neat, especially if you play a lot of AAA games.

    • @prnzssLuna
      @prnzssLuna Год назад +9

      only one hour to download larger games? That's...insanely fast already. Took me 11 hours to download Cyberpunk for example lmao.
      But yes, having a large HDD to always have all your games ready is a must. Using a used one too

    • @piguy4137
      @piguy4137 Год назад +2

      @@prnzssLuna yeah, it took me 7 hrs to download BF1. I wish I could download that fast.

    • @sategllib2191
      @sategllib2191 Год назад

      @@prnzssLuna took me a couple of days lol

    • @flyingtentacle7631
      @flyingtentacle7631 Год назад +4

      @@hi_tech_reptiles Steam Cache is still slow as shit tbh. I run a pc cafe and we used to have a steam cache running, but even at 1gb/s (the limit you will hit on most affordable multi-port network switches), very large games would take 30 minutes or longer to transfer over and most people like to try a handful of games before settling on something. We've since migrated to using 1TB SSD along side a 14TB HDD internally for each station. The SSD and HDD are tiered, so the most played games basically stay on the ssd and even if you choose something less popular, at most you'll have to wait through a HDD loading screen once, before the game moves over to the SSD automatically while you play.
      Waiting a few seconds more for a loading screen is much better than waiting half an hour for an entire game to transfer over. Even manually moving games from HDD to SSD is faster than the 1gb/s bottleneck you hit with a network. People consider hard drives to be super slow, but high capacity hard drives can easily hit 200MB/s or higher when they aren't running an OS and the workload is mainly sequential.
      Having an SSD cache and 10Gb network infrastructure would have also been a solution, but even that wouldn't have been as fast as our current setup and would have cost 10x as much. We would be better off putting 10TB SSDs in each station and calling it a day.

  • @klaxoncow
    @klaxoncow Год назад +3

    4:07 Wait a minute, why did he choose the objectively worse drive? Both more expensive AND has more power on hours?
    I think someone might have screwed up the graphics there and got the prices the wrong way around.

  • @KillzXGaming01
    @KillzXGaming01 Год назад +70

    I got a refurbished 4tb one for $60 and according to crystaldisk, it wasn't even used. Has been working great to keep big games backed up.

    • @AnzelLmao
      @AnzelLmao Год назад +6

      Did the same with a decertified 8tb easystore. Used crystal disk and it said it had like less than an hour of use and a handful of power ons. All for less than $100! Great and cheap, perfectly fine for mass storage!!

    • @NavinF
      @NavinF Год назад +22

      Oh those drives usually have their SMART data wiped. 1 hours powered on is a red flag. That said, there's nothing wrong with throwing them in a raidz2 array. Even with redundancy they're much cheaper than new drives

    • @AnzelLmao
      @AnzelLmao Год назад +4

      @@NavinF oh wow I had no clue haha. Good to know!! Thankfully I’m just using it to store footage and photos from projects/events I’ve finished editing, so I’m hoping it holds up over time! Thanks for the heads up!!

    • @syarifairlangga4608
      @syarifairlangga4608 Год назад +2

      They basically reset the Smart sensor.

    • @pootispiker2866
      @pootispiker2866 Год назад +5

      @@syarifairlangga4608 There is no "SMART sensor." The drive keeps its SMART data on a normally inaccessible area on the platters and it's not impossible to clear it

  • @danwhite3224
    @danwhite3224 Год назад +8

    I bought a 4TB WD Gold HDD on eBay about 4 years ago for £60. It's still working perfectly. I risked it because it was reasonably cheap and as it's a WD Gold, it's intended for datacentre use so it's designed to last long (MTBF of 1.2 million hours!) and is less susceptible to mishandling. Buying a used hard drive isn't always a bad thing.
    Edit: I just checked how long my drive has been running for and it's currently at 54,480 hours, SMART status is all good.

  • @jkl9984
    @jkl9984 Год назад +245

    I have a 30gb HDD from way back in 2008, that still works relatively well. It's used right now as a storage for some games like XCOM and other, older, titles. It's being read and written to somewhat infrequently, as it's not a boot drive for anything, but still, kind of amazing that it still works.

    • @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget
      @leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget Год назад +38

      But why. A 30gb hhd isn't worth the space it takes up in the case

    • @Z3t487
      @Z3t487 Год назад +55

      @@leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget If it still work why should he/she get rid of it?

    • @jamesbutson6347
      @jamesbutson6347 Год назад +19

      @@leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget If he has space it available why not use it? He already owns the thing.

    • @SebPlaysAnything
      @SebPlaysAnything Год назад +36

      @@jamesbutson6347 power usage

    • @jkl9984
      @jkl9984 Год назад +72

      ​@@leprechaunbutreallyjustamidget That HDD was the first one i got as a present from my dad. Still kinda keep it as a memory, pun intended, along with other things i got from him. I do have a normal 1tb M.2 drive on the motherboard (got it on the cheap, as the company that sells PC parts went out of the business, and were now offloading the leftover parts) and a 2TB additional storage HDD, so i'm not putting valuable files on that ancient hard drive. Just keep it around for the memory's sake, as that little present opened up a whole world of PC building for me.

  • @HasuMajo
    @HasuMajo Год назад +6

    I got curious when Alex started talking about power on hours, and the expected lifetime of drives being 45,000 hours, and setting a ceiling of 25,000 hours for purchasing used drive, so I opening up crystal disk info and took a look at the power on hours of my drives. I was absolutely floored to see oldest drive in my system, the one that I use for the majority of non critical software installs, has a whopping 70,000 hours.

  • @johndicus123
    @johndicus123 Год назад +23

    I got a Toshiba 16TB Enterprise helium-filled drive through Ebay and it had just a couple hundred hours shy of one year's worth of hours and only something like 20 on/off cycles. It was perfect! (still is). Quiet and super-fast.
    I liked it so much I ordered another one and never got it to be recognized by the computer. I wrote them and they wrote back and asked me to send it back... super easy. I got reimbursed and ordered another form the same people and it went in just fine and works as well as the first, but this one had about a year's worth of hours and 24 power-cycles. It is as quiet as the first one. All three were sent pretty well packaged with sealed ESB bags and foam around them.
    I also got some SSD's (4TB Samsungs) for about $60 off regular price, but 'open box and 'tested'. They came in envelopes, but packed with cardboard, ESD bag sealed, no label or original box as they must be kept for records. One power cycle and 67GB written and erased, otherwise, just like new ones. And since these things might last for decades, I figure as long as they are in good shape when I get them, they'll probably stay that way.

    • @namAehT
      @namAehT Год назад +5

      The key thing here IMO is the power cycles. The fewer the better, and most of these resold enterprise drives haven't even gone through 1/10th of their MTBF rate. Chances are the drive will outlast your usecase and you should be RAIDing them anyways.
      I six drives from GoHardDrive like 5 years ago and loaded them up with ISOs in an array. I've since sold those drives and they are still chugging away in my friend's server without issue.

    • @GiJoe94
      @GiJoe94 6 месяцев назад +1

      Same case here got couple of WD Reds for cheap filled with plot files. Power on time 300 days and 30 power cycles still work till this day. I have read that chia storage drives are actually the best second hand drives you can get because they don't see much work after the initial writing

  • @Jooglesberry
    @Jooglesberry 9 месяцев назад +2

    anecdote time: I bought two used hitachi 2tb drives with ~10,000 hours on them like 10 years ago and still am using them. Now they have ~92,000 hours. Idk if i was being stupid, but I actually bought them with the mentality that if they were still working after being used for a while, then they probably weren't about to fail.

  • @sondrel2
    @sondrel2 Год назад +93

    I have bought numerous used hard drives through the years. Never one problem. I've only bought from sellers with good rating. I'm from Norway btw.

    • @vicmac3513
      @vicmac3513 Год назад +2

      If you buy an used hdd, let's say from Sweden for example, how long does it take until it catches a torsk smell on atomic level? Does it require to be wrapped inside an ylletröja to make it operational?
      I'm from Finland btw.

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Год назад

      I wish I had some Norway cold. I live hot smelly swamp Florida.

    • @Sukrutwastaken
      @Sukrutwastaken Год назад

      Me from norway

    • @sondrel2
      @sondrel2 Год назад +1

      @@Keepskatin There are plenty of Norwegians that hate wind and colder temps, but I actually enjoy it very much. There's something refreshing about it.

    • @ArniesTech
      @ArniesTech Год назад +2

      100% same here. All my hobby machines run on cheap refurbished 6€/250GB 2.5" HDDs and NO issues EVER! 💪 Germany here 🇩🇪

  • @FormerHumanX
    @FormerHumanX Год назад +2

    This video should have pointed that shucking drives usually means you end up with a slower 5200RPM drive and a worse warranty (or a voided one altogether) than a regular internal drive. You save some money but you take your chances.

  • @lmitz
    @lmitz Год назад +10

    I mean I'd usually just go for the sketchy eBay white label drives

  • @vmaldia
    @vmaldia Год назад +4

    I have bought a cheap external hard drive from suspicious sites that when shucked contained a failing second hand drive

  • @prawny12009
    @prawny12009 Год назад +6

    Bought a wd green ssd from a car boot sale for £5, turned out to be dead.
    But I checked the warranty status and it was still under warranty so I sent it in for RMA and got a new one in return.

  • @JonnoHR31
    @JonnoHR31 Год назад +11

    An important warning you missed, particularly in relation to shucking drives - if you plan on using any ZFS based OS (Xigmanas, freenas etc) DO NOT use any SMR drives, which are commonly used in those portable hard drives that people shuck, which is why they're cheaper in the first place.

    • @snowhusk
      @snowhusk Год назад +1

      Can you elaborate why? Or at least point to what I should google to understand it? 🤔

    • @s01itarygaming
      @s01itarygaming Год назад +2

      I wouldn't use SMR for much of anything other than long term backup.

    • @s01itarygaming
      @s01itarygaming Год назад +1

      @@snowhusk SMR stands for "Shingled Magnetic Recording". As the name implies tracks on SMR overlap like shingles. Initial writing on SMR drives is pretty reasonable, but as soon as you delete files things start to get unbearably slow since it has to move any tracks that are overlapping on the file you're moving/deleting first. I've started buying them for long term backup/storage in place of WD green drives because the price:byte ratio is exceptionally good, but again I wouldn't use them for much else than files you don't intend on *ever* moving around or deleting.

    • @snowhusk
      @snowhusk Год назад

      @@s01itarygaming thank you

  • @valhrafnaz
    @valhrafnaz Год назад +41

    This video made me check, I still have a usable hard drive with 45000+ h of power-on time. its a slow as shit 5400 rpm that i have kept migrating between systems for years and that has seen very little to none usage in the last couple of years (hence the fact that it still works at all), but still, its running in my system right now and I recently used it as a buffer to move data between ssds without issue.

    • @dadodi
      @dadodi Год назад

      What do you mean by using it as a buffer?

    • @indoctrahol
      @indoctrahol Год назад

      @@dadodi I'm assuming it's making a quick back up of stuff when moving files to another drive. So so you're transferring from SSD 1 to SSD 2. The aforementioned hard drive would serve as the back up buffer so there are multiple points of failure. It's a good and simple way to do things. However, with this method, it will take a little more time.

    • @nucleochemist
      @nucleochemist Год назад +2

      I have a few sitting in the 40,000's hours. The 'champion' however is a 5400 RPM drive in a work PC that I built which is nearing 10 years of spin up time. All its SMART parameters are OK but I'm hesitant to do any testing on it all. One day it will be layed to rest but not today. I think the very lightweight platters in these slow 2.5" drives gives them an edge into living a long life!

    • @valhrafnaz
      @valhrafnaz Год назад

      @@indoctrahol that too, but i was mainly using it as a way to temporarily store the data because having the 2 ssds in the system at the same time wasn't an option because of limited m.2 slots (and no other drive having enough free space)

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 3 месяца назад

      45000h isnt a lot for hard drive actually. About half-life if you didnt get faulty one, it will survive AT LEAST just as much.

  • @codyn92
    @codyn92 Год назад +11

    I bought a "new" hdd on ebay awhile ago. I checked the crystal disk info for it and it had been used for like 2 years. You really got to be careful with buying hdds.

    • @gorkskoal9315
      @gorkskoal9315 Год назад +3

      2 years is probably fine tbh. It's not like drives these days aren't built like tanks mostly.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 3 месяца назад

      @@gorkskoal9315 Unless you mean toshiba ones. It seems they have a tendency to early failure, but just reliable as anything else later (and better then seagate, so there is that).

  • @ddognine
    @ddognine Год назад +2

    IMHO, if you have data to archive (not back up), let me repeat, archive, then WORM storage is the ONLY solution. Enterprise often uses LTO, but I have found that DL BD-R is great for the average consumer. I have several TBs of data archived to DL BD-R, and I fully anticipate that each disc will remain readable for at least 20 years. Of course, burning, verifying, cataloging, storing, and reading is tedious and time consuming, but too many people treat data as an afterthought and that sort of carelessness is why data get corrupted and lost. People only care about their data once it goes poof. Learn to care about your data before it goes poof so you'll invest the time and money to ensure it is secure. Once you've done that, failing hdds will be the least of your worries.

  • @mattketner7597
    @mattketner7597 Год назад +38

    I’ve bought well over 25-30+ used hard drives off of eBay, and I’ve never had a single issue.

    • @ArniesTech
      @ArniesTech Год назад +5

      100% same here. All my hobby machines run on cheap refurbished 6€/250GB 2.5" HDDs and NO issues EVER! 💪

    • @jamezxh
      @jamezxh Год назад +6

      9/10 if there going to die they’ll do it in the first few months of operation . I’m still skittish on 2nd hand drives. It’s not worth buying them now since new drives are so cheap.

    • @chrisg394
      @chrisg394 Год назад +7

      RAID is not a backup.
      I buy used drives and although a few have failed, it hasn’t risked my data;
      One time I was setting up backup task to a remote server but instead of making the remote folder look like my local folder, I mistakenly chose to have the local folder match the folder in the cloud. The task ran and deleted my local files. ZFS Snapshots to the rescue and nothing was lost. The biggest risk to my data hasn’t been failing hardware. I have been the cause of most issues.
      [EDIT: English is hard]

    • @trajectoryunown
      @trajectoryunown Год назад

      Pretty sure I've bought a couple dozen drives on Ebay. WD Blue 1TB HDDs are my most common purchase.
      Never had a failure. Actually got 2 of them in the PC I'm typing this from.
      Building a NAS with used WD Red at some point, and I have precisely zero concerns relating to the drives themselves.
      SSDs scare me a little, but I've never had issue with those either. I've got a used NVMe in my laptop, and I ran my old desktop from a used Micron m.2, which is still reliably serving its new owner. Both purchased from Ebay.

    • @ViolentMLG
      @ViolentMLG Год назад +3

      I've bought 300ish in the past year.
      All stayed functioning.
      Just made sure to check out some details in the listing beforehand.
      Not bad.

  • @Corpsecrank
    @Corpsecrank Год назад +73

    Having done this for over 20 years myself my experience is also that a drive either fails in the first year or 2 or it lasts till the end of time. If a drive makes it more than a couple years you can probably trust it for at least 10 years of use under normal conditions.

    • @McIntec
      @McIntec Год назад +3

      I can attest to this!

    • @zeroa69
      @zeroa69 Год назад +6

      Diddo. Ive got an old 90s thinkpad that was daily driven for nearly a decade and then sat in a closet since then. Booted it up for shits n giggles a couple weeks ago and xp loaded up same as always. It even fully retained the rip of anthrax white noise, took forever to load up media player but they played no problem.

    • @monkeyman767
      @monkeyman767 Год назад +2

      Same, I've had some 2nd drives that I'm still running years later (a 1tb spinning rust one), but then I've had some that died in a year. It can be a gamble but if you get a good one you're set

    • @zeroa69
      @zeroa69 Год назад +2

      @@monkeyman767 dude i have a Toshiba 500gb drive from 07 thats been a functional archive since 2015. It was an os drive for years until i replaced it with a 256gb cruicial mx ssd (its still daily driven as my primary game ssd). Now its just a backup of all my roms, outdated programs and a portion of my music libary. I have it housed in an external bay so i can spin it up a couple times a year to make sure its still good. Im about 72% health and so far no bit rot. I compressed everything into a few small folders vs instead of smashing it all together as tight as possible into 1, i think thats helped.

    • @zardock420
      @zardock420 Год назад +3

      seagate 320g 14yrs and counting here. yet it only works upside down now had to flip it to get it to work about 9 yr ago. lol

  • @TehKazlehoff
    @TehKazlehoff Год назад +8

    Like Alex said in the video: Ebay protection is very good for consumers. Make sure you read, and fully understand the policy before you buy anything. that way if you end up in a situation where what you receive doesn't match what you were told you were supposed to receive, you can tell the seller "your listing says no return, but ebay's policies say this, so i'll be returning this, send a shipping label" and their options are do it, or you go through ebay and get your money back regardless.

    • @malinwj1167
      @malinwj1167 Год назад +1

      Sellers indicate "no returns" as a deterrent to flaky buyers

  • @KunshuLucas
    @KunshuLucas Год назад +8

    I think testing AliExpress HDD's or even better SSD's would be interesting.
    I've seen many high storage SSD's for dirt cheap (2TB M.2 for 52€) and im wandering if they're any good.

    • @Kevin_Street
      @Kevin_Street Год назад

      I've seen 16 TB or even 128 TB(!) SSDs from China on sale for $60. They're absolutely scams and do not work.

    • @legominimovieproductions
      @legominimovieproductions Год назад +4

      they are probably as good as the 10$ 1TB micro sd cards on ebay (always including the small cheap ass looking micro sd to usb adapter)

    • @lejoshmont2093
      @lejoshmont2093 Год назад +1

      Sounds to be good to be true. I picked up a 1tb name brand re certified nvme drive on black Friday for less than 70 usd.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 3 месяца назад

      These TB are fake most likely. Write a bunch of labeled files on one and watch them disappear once you reached true drive capacity.

  • @manslayerdbzgt
    @manslayerdbzgt Год назад +9

    Those prices for the 18 and 16 terabyte drives are always hella good 200 or $300 is amazing that's how much at one TB was when they first came out so that's pretty good amazing actually

    • @TheBacontarian
      @TheBacontarian Год назад +1

      An 18TB Seagate drive is $300 new at best buy right now, so it's not that great a deal

  • @harshbarj
    @harshbarj 5 месяцев назад +2

    I love old enterprise class drives. I buy used WE helium filled drives. Never a problem and about 1/4th the price. As I run them in a raid they can die early, I'll just replace the drives as they fail. I also have a backup on another server, just in case.

  • @dylanstorts4327
    @dylanstorts4327 Год назад +7

    Could you guys do more videos to explain certain aspects of tech? Like the different kinds of ssds and what use cases they are best for? Or the different kinds of panels in Tvs and monitors, i.e. tn vs ips vs oled vs quantum vs whatever else?
    I know I can google all this eventually but I would never remember it all anyway and it would be sick to have a comprehensive video that I could reference about like each category of tech. You guys do pretty good work covering what you cover I just wish you would stop making sub 15 minute videos. Idk if you tend to do this because it is faster for production or the RUclips algorithm tells you this is the best way to make money but I follow this channel to learn. So don't rush the video lengths, you don't need to, I'll eventually watch it all!

  • @saisibi6708
    @saisibi6708 Год назад +2

    I want to be able to do this. Which software are they using? I want to check my NAS storage,see how much life they have in them.
    NAS storage already does have SMART in use. But it only says its good or not. Not much in detail.

  • @shangerdanger
    @shangerdanger Год назад +6

    big fan of the 1 1 1 rule lmao

  • @Stan-rs1ne
    @Stan-rs1ne Год назад +2

    I have a still running consumer grade HDD with over 94000 hours of power on time. That's almost 11 years!

  • @lukaswernetz3258
    @lukaswernetz3258 Год назад +4

    1

  • @JustFun598
    @JustFun598 Год назад +2

    03:55, well my WD Blue has 70 000+ hours, and it works pretty much the same as the day I bought it lol, with pretty much daily read and write on it.
    So TBH guys, you are pretty much safe with used HDDs, at least with WD ones.

  • @FlyboyHelosim
    @FlyboyHelosim Год назад +3

    Not even used drives, I've sometimes found brand new ones dirt cheap. I've seen WD enterprise grade drives for less than £10. Sure they're only a couple of hundred gigs in some cases. It's also worth noting that you can't necessarily trust shucking some external hard drives, especially the ones meant to be accessed remotely, as they can be locked to only work with the controller boards attached to the cases. Another thing worth noting is that you should only ever use the numbers provided by programs such as CrystalDiskInfo as a rough guide. I've seen conflicting reports between different programs, some drives don't even report some numbers, illogical Power On Count vs Power On Hours, POC and POH numbers even for brand new sealed drives, and it's possible to tamper with the firmware to report less than is the actual case.

  • @computersales
    @computersales Год назад +2

    The irony of raid is you can increase your redundancy by adding more spares to your array while increasing your failure rate.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Год назад +1

      Sort of, you increase the likelihood of a drive failing, but you reduce the likelihood of your data being lost. (assuming you aren't using straight up striping with no redundancy)

  • @me0262
    @me0262 Год назад +22

    Great video. I recently bought 4 4TB WD Reds for my NAS from eBay (taking it to the max size, stinkin' 4TB limit), supposedly former pulls from a NAS, and while I didn't check beyond a SMART Short and Conveyance test, the attributes were fine, with no ATA errors in the log. Paid $30 a drive when they're easily quadruple that cost for a new one.
    As long as you're running in a RAID mode that can survive 1 or 2 drive failures, you'll be fine.
    For full on failures like yours Alex, look into RT Tools's R-Studio, amazing recovery tool.

    • @trajectoryunown
      @trajectoryunown Год назад +5

      This exactly. As long as you aren't buying decade old drives and purchase them from reputable sellers you probably won't have an issue.
      Used HDDs are perfect RAID 5 or 6 configurations. It's definitely cheaper when the cost of replacing a single drive is less than half the cost of new.
      Buying used in bulk leads to crazy deals. I've regularly seen 10-20 or more 1TB drives selling for under $10 per drive, sometimes as low as $4.
      Hard to go wrong with savings like that.

  • @cmdrpain_
    @cmdrpain_ Год назад +2

    I bought a 4tb drive second hand 2 years ago and diskinfo said its basically new. no lost data, or hiccups over 2 years

  • @Nachokinz
    @Nachokinz Год назад +8

    As long as one is able to find sellers who regularly deal in white label hard drives, with their own warranty and customer service to back it up; they can be a relatively safe option for maximizing storage capacity for those who wish to keep their data local.

    • @williammiller3277
      @williammiller3277 Год назад +2

      Amazing how often the warranty coincides in length with eBays money back policy. Literally no real downside to offering returns for faulty drives for 30 days when eBay basically does for you, but without the return if they say so.

  • @davidv6588
    @davidv6588 Год назад +2

    I have about 150TB I need to back up. Given the outrageous prices of hard drives right now I am definitely considering going used. But I have heard the opposite about Chia mining. That it ruins hard drives.

    • @rickityrandy4156
      @rickityrandy4156 Год назад

      How did you get a 150tb hard drive?

    • @davidv6588
      @davidv6588 Год назад +1

      @@rickityrandy4156 Multiple hard drives, not one 150TB hard drive..

    • @MrMousiee
      @MrMousiee Год назад +1

      China mining only ruins the plotting drive. You use a fast ssd with high rated writes to initially create the pools and once they write to the hdd they don't really use a lot of read write.

  • @tao_ikry9819
    @tao_ikry9819 Год назад +27

    I always buy hard drives from ebay, refurbished are amazing aswell, bought a ton of 4tb drives selling for $16, less if you buy more and they were fine with an offer of $12 per drive in bulk

    • @johnsherby9130
      @johnsherby9130 Год назад

      I’ve done it just to put games on. Got a $20 drive and it kept my games just fine for a couple years before it started buggin. Pretty sure I’m the reason it broke too because I move my pc around a lot. Now I just have 3tb of SSD storage

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Год назад +1

      @Tao
      Once again, new person who buy ridiculous amount of HD capacity. What's your purpose.

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Год назад

      @@johnsherby9130 Use eternal drives,.more reliable than internal and doesn't constant get used, working parts wear down in constant use.

    • @tao_ikry9819
      @tao_ikry9819 Год назад

      @@Keepskatin tons of lossless videos and a huge steam library, plan to build a petabyte nas soon so this is minor, wanted a caching server aswell

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Год назад

      @@tao_ikry9819 That's a lot of pirating.

  • @ukrdima
    @ukrdima Год назад +2

    Sorry, but 2/3 of the price of a new one isn't "really cheap" for a hard drive

  • @ragavansuresh5035
    @ragavansuresh5035 Год назад +5

    I just want to say, shucking often involves having to deal with SATA pins that need to be cut or taped off so that they'll work as internal drives.

    • @ratm183
      @ratm183 Год назад +1

      I know it's not always available these days, but I find it easier just to use the molex connector with a SATA adapter

  • @gokul6041
    @gokul6041 Год назад +3

    I wanna build or buy my own NAS. But the single most probably main reason I'm hesitant to do so and still using cloud storage is the AI capabilities of Google photos. The main reason I opted for cloud storage is that whenever I take a picture it's set to automatically be backed up to Google photos and I know I can find alternatives to initiate automatic backups. But the search feature in Google photos is irreplaceable to me. I can search and find almost anything in my photo collection. I can search for specific people, places etc.
    Is there a way to search and sort everything in my NAS like I do in Google Photos.

    • @davyweng
      @davyweng Год назад

      Synology Photos

    • @gokul6041
      @gokul6041 Год назад

      @@davyweng Does it work like Google Photos?. The search and everything.

  • @fattomandeibu
    @fattomandeibu Год назад +7

    Those external WD drives are great for the price.
    I made an 8TB backup NAS using one and a Raspberry Pi 4. Sadly, getting your hands on a Pi is near impossible these days but you could easily use a Radxa Rock 4, whilst a bit more expensive(£60 instead of £40) it'll do the job just as well.

    • @Nalianna
      @Nalianna Год назад +1

      " Sadly, getting your hands on a Pi is near impossible these days " - Ask Jeff geerling if you can have one of the 20,000 he has.

    • @fattomandeibu
      @fattomandeibu Год назад +1

      @@Nalianna It's fine, I need 2 and have 2. I'm just saying that getting one now would be difficult.

  • @ratm183
    @ratm183 Год назад +3

    I've purchased 240TB worth of used and refurb drives over the past 2 years and the only problem I had was that 1 was DOA which the seller replaced

  • @marsovac
    @marsovac Год назад +4

    For a mechanical hard drive the amount of power cycles is more important than power on hours, if those hours were not abused.

  • @ChristianStout
    @ChristianStout Год назад +13

    Remember: using 2 old drives in RAID1 is less risky than a single new drive.

    • @flyingtentacle7631
      @flyingtentacle7631 Год назад

      This isn't even remotely true. I mean, in some instances, maybe, but depending on your definition of "old" that is definitely not an always true statement. Two drives pushing several years of power on time and minutes away from failure is obviously about as good as printing your data onto sheets of paper and storing them outside.
      Remember, you will have to read all of your data, for it to be safe. It existing on a magnetic platter does you no good if you can't read it all. Rebuilding a RAID1 when one drive fails is the most stressful thing a hard drive can do, the chance of your second one failing during the task is astronomically high. Physical data recovery is much more expensive than reliable hard drives. You're talking thousands instead of hundreds.
      Don't be cheap unless your data isn't important. If you can't afford new drives, then this argument is moot, you're going to use whatever trash you can afford regardless of what is actually the correct choice.

    • @randomman057
      @randomman057 Год назад

      @@flyingtentacle7631 New drives can have QC issues and fail within the first year of use. Older drives that are in good health and weren't abused are far safer to store files on in a mirrored setup than a single new drive.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 3 месяца назад

      @@randomman057 They are better even if you use one. There is like 10% chance that new from a factory hard drive just dies on you, within first year. Good used drive is already well past that failure stage, so it will be fine for a loooong time, before wear actually starts to show up.

  • @longerthanthirtycharacters
    @longerthanthirtycharacters Год назад +14

    If it's just for games, there's nothing wrong with using a used HDD, though of course there is always a good deal of risk that comes with buying one

    • @rishiktandra7236
      @rishiktandra7236 Год назад +1

      Hard drives aren’t the best for gaming especially when they are used

    • @longerthanthirtycharacters
      @longerthanthirtycharacters Год назад

      @@rishiktandra7236 Of course they're not ideal, but they're not bad if you're on a budget

    • @PeterLunk
      @PeterLunk Год назад

      HDD for games... LOL ... have fun during loading.

    • @nadir4562
      @nadir4562 Год назад +2

      @@PeterLunk i play cyberpunk- Witcher 3 -GTA 5-CSGO with an HDD, shit works fine and the loading aint that long

    • @rishiktandra7236
      @rishiktandra7236 Год назад

      @@longerthanthirtycharacters I guess

  • @madcat4563
    @madcat4563 Год назад +3

    3:06 Big oof.
    The Drives are only $70 cheaper than new? $200 vs $270..... wouldn't call that cheap...🤨

    • @MickeyMishra
      @MickeyMishra 11 месяцев назад

      I'm glad somebody else noticed this. Current day? 22 TB drives on Ebay are going for $199 Shipped. Meaning, You MIGHT even get 19 GB of real storage NOW! Shocking the 20TB Drive I just got on Amazon Deal days formatted to a bit less than 18.1 TB.
      Started doing a file transfer on it. Seems like things are working okay so far.

    • @infinitedragonsunlocked
      @infinitedragonsunlocked 2 месяца назад

      See that was on sale

  • @angryfurrball
    @angryfurrball Год назад +5

    I've suffered the drives sent wrapped in the thinnest of bubble wrap from Ebay. They are the worst, but as you say at least your protected. Selling any kind of IT kit on Ebay, I always overpack to protect the item and take a picture before sending. Apart from the odd nutcase buyer, never hadxan issue. Really enjoyed the video.

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Год назад

      Got shipped a RMA return discount drive from probably the most trustworthy retailer in my country.... without basically *any* packaging except for a plastic bag... Run a whole disk write test - yep it was bad...

  • @theblindspot985
    @theblindspot985 Год назад +6

    So should you check your own drive's operational hours to see when to replace them? And how would one go about doing that?

    • @CMDRSweeper
      @CMDRSweeper Год назад +1

      If you have tons of money, sure... If not, I recommend some sort of RAID redundancy setup and monitor them for read and writes... ZFS is very critical and will let you know when they start to notice errors, at that point you swap it.
      The real question is, how paranoid are you, and how likely are you to lose data, I went with 2 NAS boxes to satisfy my paranoia after my 1st NAS box which was a RAID 6 at the time, had a harddrive failure and a software issue that kicked out 2 drives, leaving me with no redundancy during rebuild.

    • @shidbbussin
      @shidbbussin Год назад

      This is a good video idea. I'd like to see what they recommend for a good way to pass over data safely.

  • @kadddddshad1424
    @kadddddshad1424 9 месяцев назад +1

    $69.99 is still absolutely absurd for a screwdriver. Even huge mainstream brands don't sell for that much. You can literally buy like 3 to 5 entire repair kits for that price that will come with everything you need to fix a fuckin car. Lol.
    Shit, go to harbor freight and you can buy half the store for that. 😂😂
    But in all seriousness, if it were $20, okay. But $70? Negative.

  • @secretwebsite
    @secretwebsite Год назад +4

    You should do a video on used enterprise SSDs. I think they might be worth it because the good ones use MLC flash which is superior to TLC and QLC found on most consumer drives. They also aren't as suceptible to physical damage during shipping.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Год назад +1

      For enterprise drives the ones with capacities like 400 and 800 GB instead of 480/512 and 960/1TB are better as they have much better wear leveling. Even better if you can get SLC ones.

  • @jonathonrosalia9345
    @jonathonrosalia9345 Год назад +1

    very happy with the 5 10tb ultra star drives I bought refurbished for $144 each been great for my plex server

  • @Bryanj2222
    @Bryanj2222 Год назад +4

    Its nice to see some correct information on Chia farming (mining). With Chia farming, plots are written to the drive one time (maybe two ) and are very light weight. I would rather buy a chia farming HDD than a data center HDD or even a personal HDD as even personal HDD's are used more than Chia in a lot of cases

    • @andrewt.5567
      @andrewt.5567 Год назад +2

      I am more concerned with the drive type than its use. Heavily used datacenter pulls have treated me far better than anything you can get from best buy.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 3 месяца назад

      @@andrewt.5567 Its just how hard drives work. If new one survived first two years - it will live for a decade or two. Spending these two years in datacenter is basically best reliability test you can do.

  • @edenrose2374
    @edenrose2374 Год назад +1

    @LTT - just a fyi, all the "Storage Based" Mining coins are worthless on HDD's. Potentially you could use ZFS and keep you ARC on SSD's to overcome the issues with this and flush the data to HDD's. But, you would still need relatively few HDD's, and a excessive amount of SSD's to make the bulk of it. As it requires fast, no-latency storage to function. (In that way, its significantly worse then GPU mining)
    So while its remotely possible some one made a huge array of these drives to try and overcome this issue with a massive CPU and a Abundance of HDD's.
    The more likely scenario is, small to medium businesses (and former small-scale datacenters) are dumping their old drives and matched spares onto the consumer market, after either replacing them or the company preparing to liquidate.
    -- Here in Australia, we see this a lot. Ever 2-4 years, there is a massive influx of HDD's on Ebay and Gumtree. Most of these are smaller businesses refreshing there storage with newer sku's. As they cannot get replacement spares from the same series.
    In IT as im sure your aware, Matching your drives is super important to provide predictable performance and reliability. Thus having hot and cold spares from the same SKU lineup is a absolute must. | Given the lifetime of such drives being around 3-5 year max, its often after 2 years you see 2yr power-on drives dumped and at 4 years a mixed 2yr power-on and their spares dumped on the market.
    As to why the consumer market, and not liquidation outlets/auctions. Thats the simplest question. Profit. Auctioning HDD's in Lots, results in the overall unit price being low. Also, without consumer protections, less individuals (Datahoarders/HomeServer) and businesses are interested in investing. So you see these go for minimal amounts. | So unit prices on Ebay means top-dollar for your used (and unused spare's).
    Perfect example of this is in 2019 i acquired 32, 8TB Drives for $17/aud and 24, 12TB drives for $8/aud from two separate Grays Auctions. | from this 30% of the drives had never been powered on. | my savings? around $6000/aud, compared to retail.

  • @pcjunkie6877
    @pcjunkie6877 Год назад +5

    Great information as always. The only thing I would add is that Amazon sells the WD enterprise drives refurbished and they do accept returns within a reasonable amount of time. I have had no issues with the “Renewed” drives as they label them.

  • @paulshort1027
    @paulshort1027 Год назад +1

    I have only ever had 2 HD's fail. The first one was in 2005 and 2 years old. Lost the first 3 years of my sons family photos, lesson learned. The IDE replacement is still going strong, but only used for backing up backup and just 120GB. The only other was my first SSD, which lasted 3 years, but even out of warranty, OCZ replaced it with a upgrade. This PC has two Cex specials that i have had for 5 years and still going strong. You can buy used with confidence so long as you backup your important stuff.🙂

  • @Neoxon619
    @Neoxon619 Год назад +9

    I’m of two minds here. On one hand, I guess you could store games on used hard drives to minimize the risk. But on the other hand, you’d be much better off storing games on an SSD for the sake of load times.

    • @Adam.Piper62
      @Adam.Piper62 Год назад +2

      Meh, with the size of today's games, (COD looking at you..) plus they are only getting larger, a 250gb SSD new for the price of a 2tb used HDD to me isn't worth it even with a few seconds extra loading time. Plus as it's only the game data stored if the drive fails you can just buy another one and reinstall the game. Furthermore, if you're not running the system of the hard drive and it's purely the game data only stored you will find loading times are not as bad as you would think.

  • @starlight4649
    @starlight4649 Год назад +1

    I've never had an HDD die on me, and I usually try to stick to a $10/terabyte baseline
    Biggest drive I have is an HGST 6tb helium drive, gets a solid 150mb/s. Spent $55 on it with shipping, it's fairly quiet with rubber spacers on it.

  • @christianhargreave3758
    @christianhargreave3758 Год назад +3

    I bought 10 3TB drives for about £150, 8 went into a nas as raid 10 (I wanted speed and redundancy) and I also have a new external 10TB drive used as a backup. This means I have 2 cold spares ready to go and saved alot of money on the initial cost with 0 drive failures in almost a year i consider it a win.

  • @kernel_data_inpage_error
    @kernel_data_inpage_error 4 месяца назад +1

    my 2008 320 GB Samsung Spinpoint has not 20 thousand hours, has 20 thousand DAYS and 5 reported spin-up retries, still at around 85% health and 0 data errors. When it comes to Toshiba drives, is the bearings that always fail, the seals on the motor wear out and the oil leaks and the rotor seizes in the best case, (if they don't the spindle is off-centered and a headcrash is guaranteed and you can kiss your data goodbye, a warning sign is an excessive vibration and overly loud motor whine)basically a case of oil starvation in a freaking computer😂
    EDIT: I meant 200k Hours, as 20 thousand days is 54 years

  • @DoctorX17
    @DoctorX17 Год назад +4

    I prefer new, but have gotten used drives without much problem as well. Refurbs are generally as good as new in my experience, or at least close enough

    • @hi_tech_reptiles
      @hi_tech_reptiles Год назад

      Generally they just don't last quite as long, but depending on use case could last for years. Stuff for servers or previously in servers is a bit different tho

    • @ArniesTech
      @ArniesTech Год назад +1

      100% same here. All my hobby machines run on cheap refurbished 6€/250GB 2.5" HDDs and NO issues EVER! 💪

  • @sams9185
    @sams9185 Год назад +1

    @4:30 I'm pretty sure this is how Toshiba would normally ship items out considering their "quality control" and life span... (Same with HGST). Terrible spinning drives IMO. That goes for both Enterprise and Home Use.

  • @ArniesTech
    @ArniesTech Год назад +8

    I absolutely love HDDs and especially for my Hobby machines where no critical data is stored, these are fantastic 💪😎 In Germany there are always tons of used 2.5" HDDs with around 6€/250GB or 10€/500GB. All by companies with warranty. Can't go wrong.

  • @liambowers666
    @liambowers666 Год назад +1

    Few big misses on this around NAS tech and considerations.
    NAS are not single use, so many have built in compute now for apps and even containers (kube, docker etc). Crucially, they also have a proper hardware RAID controller, that computer most likely doesn’t. Add a decent amount into cost calculations for this. NAS are Also (generally) a lot more power efficient and would require less maintenance than a full OS.

  • @СусаннаСергеевна
    @СусаннаСергеевна Год назад +7

    6:10 Bad backplanes can and do cause corruption. I've experienced it myself more than once, stuffing known good drives into cheap 30-bay NAS cases and getting hundreds of errors in literally minutes. Data was irrecoverably lost, because ZFS and similar file systems will try to correct the errors by overwriting them with data from the mirror, which if it doesn't itself come back corrupted, may write things out corrupted.
    IIRC Linus himself experienced this exact issue a few years ago with his "storinator", it's a bit weird to just dismiss the problem like that.

  • @razorsz195
    @razorsz195 Год назад +1

    Imo: New SSD, keep personal stuff on that + backup on external, cheap high capacity ebay drives for games storage and just backup your screenshots if you care about those, can't go wrong! At least it isn't a quantum bigfoot drive..

  • @TTK4FUN
    @TTK4FUN Год назад +6

    yaaaaaaaaaaay!!

  • @Ammageddon89
    @Ammageddon89 Год назад +1

    The money back guarantee on ebay is absolute SHIT. Friend of mine got scammed out of 200 dollars for something he never received and ebay just said "too bad for you" closed it and said "here is the parcel ID" which was from a completely different customer on the other side of the country! So yeah, tell me again how great ebays guarantee works.... (I also got scammed by ebay myself a few years back so...)

  • @AnonYmous-yz9zq
    @AnonYmous-yz9zq Год назад +4

    My old shipping co-worker flipped some drives on their side on a table once, like this video (3:00). I marked them as "will fail," they were dead about a week later. NOT knowing how their treated makes them almost worthless.

  • @nicolasmorey-chaisemartin9795
    @nicolasmorey-chaisemartin9795 Год назад +1

    My NAS has had 5 3TB WD Red for ages, all sit at ~75k power on hours and not a single UDMA_CRC_Error on one of them nothing else.
    Added a 6th to move to RAID6 2 years ago for safety but no issue in sight.

  • @fetus2280
    @fetus2280 Год назад +5

    Ive gotten some really "interesting" data off these cheap used drives . It can be a fun exploration.. if you have the right recovery software that is :)

  • @edwieweet7769
    @edwieweet7769 Год назад +1

    Is my price perception just that different from the norm? Because I don't think used harddrives for 200usd, that are 270usd new, are cheap at all. For me to buy anything used the price difference should be well north of 50%. I would even hardly consider 100usd to be cheap for these drives, irrelevant from their shape.

  • @da_pawz
    @da_pawz Год назад +12

    I bought used HDD most of the time... But I usually choose the youngest one, and choose the better one like the Red WD. I also asked the seller to test them with HDD sentinel / HD Tune too.

  • @bricefleckenstein9666
    @bricefleckenstein9666 Год назад +1

    9:00
    Best bang for the buck right now seem to be at the 10 TB level, in used Amazon drives.
    12 and 8 are very close, 14 pretty close, the BIGGER drives go up pretty fast.

  • @erroneous_dong
    @erroneous_dong Год назад +4

    If you go the external drive shucking route and pick up a WD, you'll likely need to cover the 3rd tooth of the power connector on the drive for it to work internally due to requesting extra voltage (as a measure against such conversion).
    I had to do so with a 12TB ext I picked up.

    • @MMMHOTCHEEZE
      @MMMHOTCHEEZE Год назад +1

      This has nothing to with WD discouraging shucking. The SATA specifications changed in revision 3.3 (2016), they added support for Power Disable which allows you to remotely reset a drive. Usually only server drives have this feature but WD uses server drives for their external drives. Consumer PSU's haven't caught up spec wise to fix the issue so it continuously supplies power over that 3.3v pin causing the drive to be in a constant reset state.
      If anything it's a problem with the PSU's.

  • @cabroncete
    @cabroncete Год назад +1

    Actually you can get japanese 2-4 TB drives for a few pennies in ebay UK, just pick a trustworthy seller (health checks done and so). Some let you pick the brand (would not go Seagate, for instance).

  • @pokepokepoke64
    @pokepokepoke64 Год назад +4

    In conclusion, you just have to check the seller, check the quality, and make sure you check the health. It’s definitely worth it imo

  • @ragilmalik
    @ragilmalik Год назад +1

    If you have a nuclear power at home, you can buy a 160 to 320gb IDE drive for $1 here, or even free. By spending $100, you can get 32TB storage. The next step is figuring out where to store those nuclear waste.