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frontpagetigerninety posted Yesterday 03:43 PM
frontpagetigerninety posted Yesterday 03:43 PM

22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive

+ Free Shipping

$230

$250

8% off
Best Buy
18 Comments 5,959 Views
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Deal Details
Seagate via Bestbuy has 22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive (STKP22000400) for $229.99. Shipping is free.

QuickDealStore via Amazon has 22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive (STKP22000400) for $229.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member tigerninety for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • Easy-to-use desktop hard drive—simply plug in the power adapter and USB cable
  • Fast file transfers with USB 3.3
  • Drag-and-drop file saving right out of the box
  • Automatic recognition of Windows and Mac computers for simple setup (Reformatting required for use with Time Machine)
  • Enjoy peace of mind with the included limited warranty and Rescue Data Recovery Services

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff
  • About this Store:
  • Additional Information:
    • This offer matches the previous Frontpage Deal.
    • Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars on Amazon based on over 265k customer reviews.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and/or view the Wiki and forum comments for further helpful discussion if available.

Original Post

Written by tigerninety
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Seagate via Bestbuy has 22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive (STKP22000400) for $229.99. Shipping is free.

QuickDealStore via Amazon has 22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive (STKP22000400) for $229.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member tigerninety for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • Easy-to-use desktop hard drive—simply plug in the power adapter and USB cable
  • Fast file transfers with USB 3.3
  • Drag-and-drop file saving right out of the box
  • Automatic recognition of Windows and Mac computers for simple setup (Reformatting required for use with Time Machine)
  • Enjoy peace of mind with the included limited warranty and Rescue Data Recovery Services

Editor's Notes

Written by citan359 | Staff
  • About this Store:
  • Additional Information:
    • This offer matches the previous Frontpage Deal.
    • Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars on Amazon based on over 265k customer reviews.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and/or view the Wiki and forum comments for further helpful discussion if available.

Original Post

Written by tigerninety

Community Voting

Deal Score
+27
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Get Deal at Best Buy

Price Intelligence

Model: Seagate Expansion 22TB External Hard Drive HDD - USB 3.0, with Rescue Data Recovery Services (STKP22000400)

Deal History 

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Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 11/23/2025, 06:09 PM
Sold By Sale Price
Best Buy$229.99
Walmart$229.99
NewEgg$289.99

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Top Comments

CTRFK8
10410 Posts
1084 Reputation
Even though the new 22TB Seagate externals use Barracuda CMR drives with HAMR technology, they're still built as desktop-class drives, not NAS or enterprise units. Their workload rating, vibration tolerance, and firmware are tuned for light, single-drive usage — not RAID arrays, multi-bay vibration, or nonstop 24/7 workloads.

The 22TB HAMR Barracuda is basically a desktop drive that won the genetic lottery for capacity but failed every fitness test afterward.
Yeah, it's CMR and HAMR — cool — but the workload rating is so pathetic it might as well come with a warning label:
"For light use only. Like… VERY light. Please don't stress me out."
Put this thing in a NAS and the moment a RAID rebuild starts, it'll be in the corner having a panic attack, filing HR complaints against your other drives.

Despite the cutting-edge HAMR recording tech, the drive's workload rating and reliability specs fall far behind what a NAS environment demands, making it a poor fit for anything beyond occasional archival or general storage.
shivster1796
612 Posts
574 Reputation
The 26TB is available from Newegg for $250 which is better value at $9.62/TB vs this is $10.45/TB https://www.newegg.com/seagate-ex...6822185116

17 Comments

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Pro
Yesterday 05:55 PM
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CTRFK8
Pro
Yesterday 05:55 PM
10,410 Posts

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

Even though the new 22TB Seagate externals use Barracuda CMR drives with HAMR technology, they're still built as desktop-class drives, not NAS or enterprise units. Their workload rating, vibration tolerance, and firmware are tuned for light, single-drive usage — not RAID arrays, multi-bay vibration, or nonstop 24/7 workloads.

The 22TB HAMR Barracuda is basically a desktop drive that won the genetic lottery for capacity but failed every fitness test afterward.
Yeah, it's CMR and HAMR — cool — but the workload rating is so pathetic it might as well come with a warning label:
"For light use only. Like… VERY light. Please don't stress me out."
Put this thing in a NAS and the moment a RAID rebuild starts, it'll be in the corner having a panic attack, filing HR complaints against your other drives.

Despite the cutting-edge HAMR recording tech, the drive's workload rating and reliability specs fall far behind what a NAS environment demands, making it a poor fit for anything beyond occasional archival or general storage.
8
3
2
Pro
Yesterday 06:41 PM
612 Posts
Joined Jun 2018
shivster1796
Pro
Yesterday 06:41 PM
612 Posts
The 26TB is available from Newegg for $250 which is better value at $9.62/TB vs this is $10.45/TB https://www.newegg.com/seagate-ex...6822185116
Yesterday 06:55 PM
5,926 Posts
Joined Aug 2010
gamingdroidYesterday 06:55 PM
5,926 Posts
Quote from CTRFK8 :
Even though the new 22TB Seagate externals use Barracuda CMR drives with HAMR technology, they're still built as desktop-class drives, not NAS or enterprise units. Their workload rating, vibration tolerance, and firmware are tuned for light, single-drive usage — not RAID arrays, multi-bay vibration, or nonstop 24/7 workloads.

The 22TB HAMR Barracuda is basically a desktop drive that won the genetic lottery for capacity but failed every fitness test afterward.
Yeah, it's CMR and HAMR — cool — but the workload rating is so pathetic it might as well come with a warning label:
"For light use only. Like… VERY light. Please don't stress me out."
Put this thing in a NAS and the moment a RAID rebuild starts, it'll be in the corner having a panic attack, filing HR complaints against your other drives.

Despite the cutting-edge HAMR recording tech, the drive's workload rating and reliability specs fall far behind what a NAS environment demands, making it a poor fit for anything beyond occasional archival or general storage.
Any resources to corroborate this claim?
I agree it's a desktop class drive and is not rated for NAS use of 24/7. That said, it would be good to substantiate if there's been testing, or indicated as such by the specs or otherwise.
Yesterday 06:56 PM
5,926 Posts
Joined Aug 2010
gamingdroidYesterday 06:56 PM
5,926 Posts
Quote from shivster1796 :
The 26TB is available from Newegg for $250 which is better value at $9.62/TB vs this is $10.45/TB https://www.newegg.com/seagate-ex...6822185116
Damn. Now I wish I bought some of that $100 GC that came with that promo gift card.
Yesterday 07:28 PM
123 Posts
Joined Mar 2011
soundbytegfxYesterday 07:28 PM
123 Posts
Quote from gamingdroid :
Any resources to corroborate this claim?I agree it's a desktop class drive and is not rated for NAS use of 24/7. That said, it would be good to substantiate if there's been testing, or indicated as such by the specs or otherwise.
Most of data and expert opinion I could find say these are just binned EXOs and the workload rating / warranty difference is purely for product segmentation.

All drives from all manufacturers eventually fail. Ive some 3TB WD drives for over 12 years ago that have been running in my Unraid server 24/7 and are just fine. Yes I've also has a couple of those same drives fail over the same timespan, but theyre all "desktop" rated drives.

If you need the space, this is a great deal and statistically the drive will serve you well regardless of how you use it.
1
Yesterday 08:38 PM
70 Posts
Joined Dec 2010
dnanaYesterday 08:38 PM
70 Posts
Quote from shivster1796 :
The 26TB is available from Newegg for $250 which is better value at $9.62/TB vs this is $10.45/TB https://www.newegg.com/seagate-ex...6822185116
You can use the PayPal buy now pay later deal(BNPL) that's going on for 20% off. It's sold by newegg but can purchase it directly through Best Buy. For those that qualify you'll see an option for that PayPal option during checkout and scroll to the bottom for BNPL.
Yesterday 09:07 PM
5,926 Posts
Joined Aug 2010
gamingdroidYesterday 09:07 PM
5,926 Posts
Quote from dnana :
You can use the PayPal buy now pay later deal(BNPL) that's going on for 20% off. It's sold by newegg but can purchase it directly through Best Buy. For those that qualify you'll see an option for that PayPal option during checkout and scroll to the bottom for BNPL.
When I checkout with Best Buy and use Paypal, I don't see the 20% CB BNPL option. On Newegg, I do see a $40 offer, but it's for a credit card it seems, not the BNPL.

Edit: For those wondering, I found the deal. You have to go to the rewards section on Paypal and "save" the offer first. It's here: https://slickdeals.net/f/18824500-select-paypal-accounts-pay-later-with-paypal-get-20-cash-back?v=1
It's best to combine purchases to increase CB.

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Today 01:59 AM
82 Posts
Joined Sep 2012
ErfortHyPToday 01:59 AM
82 Posts
Quote from gamingdroid :
When I checkout with Best Buy and use Paypal, I don't see the 20% CB BNPL option. On Newegg, I do see a $40 offer, but it's for a credit card it seems, not the BNPL.

Edit: For those wondering, I found the deal. You have to go to the rewards section on Paypal and "save" the offer first. It's here: https://slickdeals.net/f/18824500-select-paypal-accounts-pay-later-with-paypal-get-20-cash-back?v=1
It's best to combine purchases to increase CB.
Tnx. Just BNPL with PayPal. When will we get the 20% cash back? After completing the last payment?Is there way to confirm we actually correctly activated this?
Today 03:15 AM
871 Posts
Joined Sep 2007
DeliciousIronyToday 03:15 AM
871 Posts
are we ever going to see these with USB-C interfaces?
Today 03:32 AM
711 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
MiraxchangeToday 03:32 AM
711 Posts
B&H Photo has the Seagate 24TB expansion for $249.99

https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/pr...drive.html
Today 05:59 AM
375 Posts
Joined Feb 2004
Adam2004Today 05:59 AM
375 Posts
Quote from DeliciousIrony :
are we ever going to see these with USB-C interfaces?
micro USB 3 to USB-C cable: https://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Bas...202&sr=8-3
Today 12:42 PM
143 Posts
Joined Oct 2018
TomKansasCity68Today 12:42 PM
143 Posts
Quote from shivster1796 :
The 26TB is available from Newegg for $250 which is better value at $9.62/TB vs this is $10.45/TB https://www.newegg.com/seagate-ex...6822185116
good-looking out. I needed the storage, and 26TB will help me clear out 3 x 8TB drives I have that are fool. This new 26TB drive is my "Black Friday" purchase. I'm going to move all the movies over from those 3 drives and this is going to be cold storage, but also, the occasional movie will be streamed from this drive a few times a week, or maybe even daily. It will never see high usage. I really hope the 20% PayPal reward thing worked for me. That's like $50+ dollars. Thanks again.
Today 04:30 PM
3,751 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
Ducman69Today 04:30 PM
3,751 Posts
Quote from shivster1796 :
The 26TB is available from Newegg for $250 which is better value at $9.62/TB vs this is $10.45/TB https://www.newegg.com/seagate-ex...6822185116
Not only better value per TB, but its always a better value to have the largest size possible even if the price per TB is a little higher, as it will be useful to you much longer and use less power and space.

That said, there's also this option: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DW92YSB6 at $10.35/TB and a whopping 28TB.
Today 06:36 PM
139 Posts
Joined Dec 2008
calebu2Today 06:36 PM
139 Posts
Quote from CTRFK8 :
Even though the new 22TB Seagate externals use Barracuda CMR drives with HAMR technology, they're still built as desktop-class drives, not NAS or enterprise units. Their workload rating, vibration tolerance, and firmware are tuned for light, single-drive usage — not RAID arrays, multi-bay vibration, or nonstop 24/7 workloads. The 22TB HAMR Barracuda is basically a desktop drive that won the genetic lottery for capacity but failed every fitness test afterward. Yeah, it's CMR and HAMR — cool — but the workload rating is so pathetic it might as well come with a warning label: "For light use only. Like… VERY light. Please don't stress me out." Put this thing in a NAS and the moment a RAID rebuild starts, it'll be in the corner having a panic attack, filing HR complaints against your other drives. Despite the cutting-edge HAMR recording tech, the drive's workload rating and reliability specs fall far behind what a NAS environment demands, making it a poor fit for anything beyond occasional archival or general storage.
Is there any advantage of getting a second one of these and setting it up in parallel as raid1 in a windows PC?

Im backing up to the cloud daily, but would love to have a local solution if the drive fails.

On the surface of it, two drives seems better than one. But if you are telling me there's a good chance drive #2 dies before I can replace drive #1...

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Today 06:57 PM
753 Posts
Joined Nov 2008
AMiller31Today 06:57 PM
753 Posts
I need a large HD for my Unifi Dream Machine for home camera security.

I know this isn't a "purple" drive, but is this a good idea to buy it, shuck it, and use it for home camera system?

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