expiredRazorConcepts posted Apr 02, 2024 04:19 AM
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expiredRazorConcepts posted Apr 02, 2024 04:19 AM
Refurb 10TB HGST WD Ultrastar DC HC510 3.5" SATA 7200RPM Hard Drive $69.99
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank lastwraith
1) Yes, these are used drives. If you don't like it, move along. You don't want anyone to actually try to refurbish these because they are welded shut to contain the helium. I'm guessing virtually zero third-party places can effectively service these.
2) For an extra $10-20, you can probably get another 2+TB on another SD here. This is the normal (good) price for a sale.
3) Yes, you'll get the full 5yr warranty from goharddrive. If you don't believe me (and you shouldn't), ask them directly
4) You may get a PWDIS drive, so be prepared to snip or tape that third pin, use a crimped molex connector, or use an enclosure, depending on your needs and if you have an older PSU that doesn't power up the drive correctly because it doesn't support PWDIS.
5) Yes, it IS a lot of data to potentially lose. But if you actually care about your data, it shouldn't matter since you have backups and are potentially putting this into an array where RAID/parity means you also have fault tolerance and (hopefully) reporting.
6) Just like with any new (to you) drive, use software to run a full surface test of the drive. Something like the older WD Data Lifeguard will suffice here, but some people prefer HD Sentinel, badblocks, H2testw, or the stuff built into their array solution (like unraid preclear or Stablebit Scanner).
7) Yes, there have been better deals in the past. Give us the keys to the DeLorean or don't bother posting your humble-brags.
8) I probably forgot some stuff, but these are pretty much the things that should IMO be listed at the beginning of every HDD thread because it gets old real fast.
Quick technical question for others who are smarter than me in this area. I tested the drives by running CHKDSK /r through the windows command prompt. Took most of a day, and as I understand it, that checks for bad sectors on the HD, and all of the drives came up clean.
Is there added value in running other third-party software like mentioned above by Lastwraith? Maybe those go deeper and check every possible write location where CHKDSK does broader sector checks?
Any feedback welcome/appreciated.
IOW, I've had good luck with HGST drives, but have been using WD red pros in my NAS. How would these do in an unraid box?
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank DreamerbyDesign
1) Yes, these are used drives. If you don't like it, move along. You don't want anyone to actually try to refurbish these because they are welded shut to contain the helium. I'm guessing virtually zero third-party places can effectively service these.
2) For an extra $10-20, you can probably get another 2+TB on another SD here. This is the normal (good) price for a sale.
3) Yes, you'll get the full 5yr warranty from goharddrive. If you don't believe me (and you shouldn't), ask them directly
4) You may get a PWDIS drive, so be prepared to snip or tape that third pin, use a crimped molex connector, or use an enclosure, depending on your needs and if you have an older PSU that doesn't power up the drive correctly because it doesn't support PWDIS.
5) Yes, it IS a lot of data to potentially lose. But if you actually care about your data, it shouldn't matter since you have backups and are potentially putting this into an array where RAID/parity means you also have fault tolerance and (hopefully) reporting.
6) Just like with any new (to you) drive, use software to run a full surface test of the drive. Something like the older WD Data Lifeguard will suffice here, but some people prefer HD Sentinel, badblocks, H2testw, or the stuff built into their array solution (like unraid preclear or Stablebit Scanner).
7) Yes, there have been better deals in the past. Give us the keys to the DeLorean or don't bother posting your humble-brags.
8) I probably forgot some stuff, but these are pretty much the things that should IMO be listed at the beginning of every HDD thread because it gets old real fast.
This is a favorite, because it has a good sized cooling fan.
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This is a favorite, because it has a good sized cooling fan.
Quick technical question for others who are smarter than me in this area. I tested the drives by running CHKDSK /r through the windows command prompt. Took most of a day, and as I understand it, that checks for bad sectors on the HD, and all of the drives came up clean.
Is there added value in running other third-party software like mentioned above by Lastwraith? Maybe those go deeper and check every possible write location where CHKDSK does broader sector checks?
Any feedback welcome/appreciated.
So I think the answer depends on what level of trust you want to put in the disk and what your backup solutions are. As I understand it CHKDSK /r will do a search for bad sectors only on the windows formatted partition of the drive whereas there are other Linux and command line tools like BadBlocks that will scan the entire disk, ignoring filesystems.
Are you formatting as NTFS? Or ext4? Will this drive be in a RAID config where you can easily swap it out if it starts throwing bad sectors or is this your primary drive?
For whatever it's worth, I bought a couple of 14TB refurbs from GoHardDrive to use for backup purposes and I'm currently running it through a lengthy badblocks test where it does 4 passes of writing random characters and then checking/comparing each pass. If it makes it through this without a bad sector I feel confident to keep the drive.
But....I'm only 75% done with that test right now, at 140 hours in.... so you have to decide if that's worth it
More info if interested:
https://perfectmediaser
https://github.com/Spearfoot/disk...nd-testing
1) Yes, these are used drives. If you don't like it, move along. You don't want anyone to actually try to refurbish these because they are welded shut to contain the helium. I'm guessing virtually zero third-party places can effectively service these.
2) For an extra $10-20, you can probably get another 2+TB on another SD here. This is the normal (good) price for a sale.
3) Yes, you'll get the full 5yr warranty from goharddrive. If you don't believe me (and you shouldn't), ask them directly
4) You may get a PWDIS drive, so be prepared to snip or tape that third pin, use a crimped molex connector, or use an enclosure, depending on your needs and if you have an older PSU that doesn't power up the drive correctly because it doesn't support PWDIS.
5) Yes, it IS a lot of data to potentially lose. But if you actually care about your data, it shouldn't matter since you have backups and are potentially putting this into an array where RAID/parity means you also have fault tolerance and (hopefully) reporting.
6) Just like with any new (to you) drive, use software to run a full surface test of the drive. Something like the older WD Data Lifeguard will suffice here, but some people prefer HD Sentinel, badblocks, H2testw, or the stuff built into their array solution (like unraid preclear or Stablebit Scanner).
7) Yes, there have been better deals in the past. Give us the keys to the DeLorean or don't bother posting your humble-brags.
8) I probably forgot some stuff, but these are pretty much the things that should IMO be listed at the beginning of every HDD thread because it gets old real fast.
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