Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands or deals, including promoted items.
Sorry, this deal has expired. Get notified of deals like this in the future. Add Deal Alert for this Item
Frontpage

20TB Toshiba MG10 3.5" 7.2K RPM SATA Hard Drive Expired

$278
$349.99
+ Free Shipping
+33 Deal Score
18,687 Views
Server Part Deals has 20TB Toshiba MG10 3.5" 7.2K RPM SATA Hard Drive (MG10ACA20TE) on sale for $277.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member bcm00re for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • Conventional Magnetic Recording (CMR) for broad compatibility
  • Toshiba Flux Control Microwave-assisted Magnetic Recording (FC-MAMR) Technology
  • Industry-leading 10-disk helium-sealed design for superior storage density
  • Industry Standard 3.5-inch 26.1mm height Form Factor
  • 7200rpm Performance
  • SATA 6.0Gbit/s Interfacess
  • Lower operational power profile, providing excellent power efficiency (W/TB) for better TCO
  • 550 Total TB Transferred per Year Workload Rating
  • 512e or 4Kn Advanced Format Sector Technology; (512e Model) Includes Toshiba Persistent Write Cache Technology for Data-Loss Protection in Sudden Power-Loss Events
  • Power efficiency improvements vs. prior MG Series generations
Good Deal?

Original Post

Written by
Edited August 19, 2023 at 12:22 AM by
https://serverpartdeals.com/produ...hard-drive

Capacity: 20TB
Interface: SATA
Form Factor: 3.5 inch
Spindle Speed: 7.2K RPM
Condition: New
Warranty: 5 Years Manufacturer

The MG10 Series features Toshiba's fourth-generation, 10-disk Helium-sealed design to advance Conventional Magnetic Recording (CMR) density to 2TB per disk, achieving a total capacity up to 20TB. The industry-standard 3.5-inch form-factor provides 7200rpm performance, and integrates easily into cloud-scale storage infrastructure, business-critical servers and storage, and File and Object storage solutions.

The massive 20TB CMR capacity is delivered using Toshiba's innovative Flux Control Microwave Assisted Magnetic Recording (FC-MAMR™) technology. These advances help the MG10 Series to achieve optimum storage capacity and application compatibility, with unsurpassed data reliability. Available with a SATA 6.0Gbit/s interface, the MG10 Series models integrate easily into standard 3.5-inch drive bays to help reduce the footprint and operational burden of cloud-scale storage infrastructure, File and Object storage systems, and business critical servers and storage systems.
If you purchase something through a post on our site, Slickdeals may get a small share of the sale.
Deal
Score
+33
18,687 Views
$278
$349.99

Your comment cannot be blank.

Featured Comments

I posted it because it's the best price per TB that I found for brand new HDD for the past week or so. And I think most people trust Toshiba more than Seagate for drives.
This is new as well and doesn't have tax for most, and more likely to be packed well. So in every measurable way its a better deal.
Only buy from Seagate if you don't value your data. Stopped buying from Seagate after 2009 since alll their drives fail within a 3 year span for me.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Joined Aug 2018
L7: Teacher
> bubble2 8,724 Posts
1,449 Reputation
Pro
TodayOnly
08-21-2023 at 06:47 PM.
08-21-2023 at 06:47 PM.
Quote from NeatLeopard456 :
oopsie
oh shit! cat out of bag!!
1
Like
Funny
>
Helpful
Not helpful
Reply
Joined Feb 2013
L3: Novice
> bubble2 116 Posts
11 Reputation
Johnathan01
08-22-2023 at 04:09 AM.
08-22-2023 at 04:09 AM.
Finally I can download every steam game I own now let's just see how long it takes to write all those games to the disc
Like
Funny
>
Helpful
Not helpful
Reply
Joined Dec 2010
L5: Journeyman
> bubble2 565 Posts
42 Reputation
jmunjr
08-22-2023 at 09:10 AM.
08-22-2023 at 09:10 AM.
I've had drives fail from Conner, Maxtor, Quantum, Fujitsu, Samsung, IBM, Hitachi, Toshiba, WD and Seagate - all of them. Some are better than others at certain times and with certain models and generations. I always make sure everything is backed up and for the huge drives with lots of data I make sure I use a different drive(s) than the source, at least with local backups. I don't use the same model/batch/brand - some combo of that. If you use identical drives and a drive fails you better restore ASAP. That's obvious but I've always been uncomfortable when my backup drives are identical to the one that just failed.
Like
Funny
>
Helpful
Not helpful
Reply
Joined Nov 2019
L3: Novice
> bubble2 201 Posts
121 Reputation
Ricard0123
08-22-2023 at 07:08 PM.
08-22-2023 at 07:08 PM.
I need about 10 of these!
Like
Funny
>
Helpful
Not helpful
Reply
Joined Oct 2011
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,548 Posts
3,018 Reputation
MWink
08-22-2023 at 08:27 PM.
08-22-2023 at 08:27 PM.
Quote from jmunjr :
I've had drives fail from Conner, Maxtor, Quantum, Fujitsu, Samsung, IBM, Hitachi, Toshiba, WD and Seagate - all of them. Some are better than others at certain times and with certain models and generations. I always make sure everything is backed up and for the huge drives with lots of data I make sure I use a different drive(s) than the source, at least with local backups. I don't use the same model/batch/brand - some combo of that. If you use identical drives and a drive fails you better restore ASAP. That's obvious but I've always been uncomfortable when my backup drives are identical to the one that just failed.
For all the hate IBM and Seagate got/get (which I'm not saying was/is undeserved) Quantum probably contributed the most to my magnet collection. I had piles of dead Quantum ~2GB drives.
Like
Funny
>
Helpful
Not helpful
Reply
Page 4 of 4
Start the Conversation
 
Link Copied

The link has been copied to the clipboard.