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expired Posted by KDoggMDF • Mar 7, 2023
expired Posted by KDoggMDF • Mar 7, 2023

18TB Seagate Exos X18 7200RPM 3.5" Internal Enterprise Hard Drive (Recertified)

+ Free Shipping

$190

$300

36% off
Server Part Deals
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Server Part Deals has 18TB Seagate Exos X18 7200RPM 3.5" Internal Enterprise Hard Drive (Manufacturer Recertified, ST18000NM000J) for $189.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member KDoggMDF for finding this deal.

Editor's Notes

Written by johnny_miller | Staff
  • About this deal:
  • Warranty:
    • Includes 2-year warranty.
  • Reviews:

Original Post

Written by KDoggMDF
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Server Part Deals has 18TB Seagate Exos X18 7200RPM 3.5" Internal Enterprise Hard Drive (Manufacturer Recertified, ST18000NM000J) for $189.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member KDoggMDF for finding this deal.

Editor's Notes

Written by johnny_miller | Staff
  • About this deal:
  • Warranty:
    • Includes 2-year warranty.
  • Reviews:

Original Post

Written by KDoggMDF

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+69
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Top Comments

Cerawind
209 Posts
294 Reputation
A few months ago I made my first purchase from this website, based off glowing reviews from the commenters. Oddly enough, my first purchase was a bad hard drive! (Or maybe not odd and people here are just getting really lucky?) Inserting the hard drive just kept rebooting my system, and they told me to return it. The return process was really easy, however, and they really stood by their product. I felt confident enough that I got another hard drive after that incident and the new one has been working flawlessly.
mrgino
649 Posts
189 Reputation
Solid deal, thanks. I've bought so many of these over the past 6 months and had zero issues so far. I'll never shuck another WD drive again.
TheEdge
9253 Posts
2590 Reputation
I bought 4 x 12TB from this seller about six weeks ago. Shipped fast. Packaged VERY WELL. No tax. And they're running great.

225 Comments

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Mar 7, 2023
4 Posts
Joined Mar 2019
Mar 7, 2023
Serijag
Mar 7, 2023
4 Posts
Never bought from them before but considering it after last few posts. Question on the refurb though. There is a decent $30ish different in price from manufacture refurb to seller refurb. One is done by Seagate and the other is done by serverpartdeals? Any thoughts on which do go with? Why one is better?

Thanks!
Pro
Mar 7, 2023
10,148 Posts
Joined Nov 2006
Mar 7, 2023
CTRFK8
Pro
Mar 7, 2023
10,148 Posts
Quote from ms123 :
Looking for home business solution.( I can do very well with 4TB storage too).

what's the best free software to auto clone (or backup) my work files during the day? I think I should be fine if it auto backs up every 12 hours. guidance needed.

Also, this one is similar quality too if 12TB option is enough? https://serverpartdeals.com/produ...tified-hdd
I would suggest looking into a 4-5 bay synology with at least 1 drive parity. Preferably 2 drives.

you can run synology raid which is just like unraid but using BTRFS a file system that prevents bitrot etc. Synology makes one of the best consumer NAS out there for ease of use. All the dockers you can download will be easy to setup and you can easily set everything up the way you want. Even backing up other computers on the network. Synology raid allows you to pop out a hdd and install a larger hdd in the future to increase the size of the array. if you go with a traditional raid you will be forced to upgrade all the drives , and then move your old data somehow onto the new array.

Also the BTRFS has a feature to prevent your device from ransom ware
https://www.synology.com/en-us/dsm/Btrfs


or you could just use acronis for windows. I would seriously consider just investing in a NAS for work since you can always access your data outside your home network with ease through synology login
https://www.acronis.com/en-us/
Mar 7, 2023
26 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
Mar 7, 2023
bsocko
Mar 7, 2023
26 Posts
Quote from NavyTent460 :
I work in IT and I have personally never seen Seagate in enterprise servers. I wonder who uses them
Dell Servers
Pro
Mar 7, 2023
10,148 Posts
Joined Nov 2006
Mar 7, 2023
CTRFK8
Pro
Mar 7, 2023
10,148 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank CTRFK8

Quote from Serijag :
Never bought from them before but considering it after last few posts. Question on the refurb though. There is a decent $30ish different in price from manufacture refurb to seller refurb. One is done by Seagate and the other is done by serverpartdeals? Any thoughts on which do go with? Why one is better?

Thanks!

These are Re-certs from Seagate. Refurb is a lose term used by authorized and unauthorized sellers that basically just check the drives firmware stats before shipping.

buying a recert means the smart data is wiped probably from seagate and sometimes the checks are even better than new drives coming off the assembly line. Which seagate claims.

The seller also runs the drives to test them before shipping.
I suggest everyone use hard drive sentinel to look at your hdds or use this for unraid and true nas servers.
https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-scrutiny
2
1
Mar 7, 2023
2,692 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
Mar 7, 2023
sup3rson1c
Mar 7, 2023
2,692 Posts
I've posted this in other threads with these drives and this vendor, but from a sample size of two 16TB, I had one drive die just outside of the 30 days return window. Although I had to pay shipping to the facility, the process was painless.
Mar 7, 2023
4 Posts
Joined Mar 2019
Mar 7, 2023
Serijag
Mar 7, 2023
4 Posts
Quote from CTRFK8 :
These are Re-certs from Seagate. Refurb is a lose term used by authorized and unauthorized sellers that basically just check the drives firmware stats before shipping.

buying a recert means the smart data is wiped probably from seagate and sometimes the checks are even better than new drives coming off the assembly line. Which seagate claims.

The seller also runs the drives to test them before shipping.
I suggest everyone use hard drive sentinel to look at your hdds or use this for unraid and true nas servers.
https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-scrutiny
Sounds good thank you!

Does that tool (or the scrutiny one it looks like replaced it) do more than the extended smart test you can kick off in unraid?
Mar 7, 2023
486 Posts
Joined Nov 2014
Mar 7, 2023
StreetJedi
Mar 7, 2023
486 Posts
Quote from TheEdge :
I bought 4 x 12TB from this seller about six weeks ago. Shipped fast. Packaged VERY WELL. No tax. And they're running great.
Get back to us in 2 years.
2

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Mar 7, 2023
14 Posts
Joined Oct 2022
Mar 7, 2023
BoastfulShape142
Mar 7, 2023
14 Posts
Quote from ppysr :
Seagate consumer drives used to be pretty bad not sure about now, but most enterprise grade drives are much better when it comes to reliability
Enterprise drives are a whole other level when it comes to reliability.
1
Mar 7, 2023
59 Posts
Joined Sep 2015
Mar 7, 2023
NoOneBetter
Mar 7, 2023
59 Posts
in for a couple, about time for me to upgrade my capacity.
Mar 7, 2023
277 Posts
Joined Dec 2004
Mar 7, 2023
ctuttle
Mar 7, 2023
277 Posts
Ordered some drives from them a couple of weeks ago. Packing was outstanding, and delivered in 2 days and no sales tax. Drives tested out fine and are in service now. No complaints
Mar 7, 2023
287 Posts
Joined Jul 2005
Mar 7, 2023
nobody2000
Mar 7, 2023
287 Posts
Quote from kherbinoskie :
So it is not fine.

Backups isn't just about protecting yourself from failing drives. Other than fire, if they steal your whole server, then your parity isn't going to help you.

Also, a bad PSU, a lightning, an electric surge etc can all kill your drives and no parity can help if all drives are dead.
I just find it funny that people think RAID is a backup on a thread about a refurbished drive, which are known to be prone to failure. You point out perfectly good reasons why you need an ACTUAL backup.

Plus - power surges are unlikely in general, but they've been known to blow good quality enterprise UPS units, they've fried surge protection units, and even with those protections in place, they've fried servers. People running these in their homes are probably 9/10 not running AFCIs on the circuit with the server. Hell - a ton are probably running way over their amp rating on a power strip.

I just don't get why people are cool with playing with fire. Some guy's talking about having all these PBs data, but that literally becomes massively threatened with one really inconvenient disaster.

RAID/Parity is to keep continuity of service. That's it. Yes - technically it's a type of backup, but it's only useful if a drive goes out and you still have parity somewhere. Thing is - you might lose 1-2 drives and you'll survive, but what if you have an array that acts up (physical array like an MD-1200)???

But parity/RAID is completely useless as a backup the second something like ransomware hits you. Yes - I'm proud of you all for running everything through wireguard. It's good that you have a fail2ban like program running to keep someone from hitting you. I'm thrilled that you have a secure reverse proxy for a specific application. It's great that you have your containers set up in a way that minimizes access to some files - it doesn't matter - if you slip up, or if a bad actor moves quicker than the software can be patched by the developer, your data is locked up.

Yes - there are a million best practices to avoid that. Meanwhile there are like two simple best practices for backup. Ransomware might get your production machine and even your onsite backup if you're sloppy, but it probably won't get your offsite backup.
3
Mar 7, 2023
1,639 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
Mar 7, 2023
kherbinoskie
Mar 7, 2023
1,639 Posts
Quote from nobody2000 :
I just find it funny that people think RAID is a backup on a thread about a refurbished drive, which are known to be prone to failure. You point out perfectly good reasons why you need an ACTUAL backup.

Plus - power surges are unlikely in general, but they've been known to blow good quality enterprise UPS units, they've fried surge protection units, and even with those protections in place, they've fried servers. People running these in their homes are probably 9/10 not running AFCIs on the circuit with the server. Hell - a ton are probably running way over their amp rating on a power strip.

I just don't get why people are cool with playing with fire. Some guy's talking about having all these PBs data, but that literally becomes massively threatened with one really inconvenient disaster.

RAID/Parity is to keep continuity of service. That's it. Yes - technically it's a type of backup, but it's only useful if a drive goes out and you still have parity somewhere. Thing is - you might lose 1-2 drives and you'll survive, but what if you have an array that acts up (physical array like an MD-1200)???

But parity/RAID is completely useless as a backup the second something like ransomware hits you. Yes - I'm proud of you all for running everything through wireguard. It's good that you have a fail2ban like program running to keep someone from hitting you. I'm thrilled that you have a secure reverse proxy for a specific application. It's great that you have your containers set up in a way that minimizes access to some files - it doesn't matter - if you slip up, or if a bad actor moves quicker than the software can be patched by the developer, your data is locked up.

Yes - there are a million best practices to avoid that. Meanwhile there are like two simple best practices for backup. Ransomware might get your production machine and even your onsite backup if you're sloppy, but it probably won't get your offsite backup.
They have already made up their minds and will not listen to anyone. I work in Enterprise level for quite a while now and I've seen many things and I just wanted to share what isn't enough. I guess SD'ers are all expert on this matter and probably know better than me.

I am done and arguing back and forth with them isn't on my best interest.
3
Mar 7, 2023
140 Posts
Joined Jan 2017
Mar 7, 2023
jmate
Mar 7, 2023
140 Posts
Thank you OP. just ordered 1.
Mar 7, 2023
2,382 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
Mar 7, 2023
CheapBastardX10
Mar 7, 2023
2,382 Posts
Got a 12tb drive from them 2 months ago and everything is working great. My only complaint is that it's noisy when active
1

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Mar 7, 2023
146 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
Mar 7, 2023
JHFerry
Mar 7, 2023
146 Posts
Quote from Swrath239 :
They are silent when spun down. I run an unraid with these, they only make noise when first waking up, or having a lot of read/writes off them at once. Otherwise, watching 2 streams via jellyfin they are silent.
Great thanks

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