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reliable drive for home storage?
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reliable drive for home storage?
I came back from holiday and my file server has died.
I think it must have cooked the 2TB Seagate drive with all the data on it.
Initially it wouldn't even appear as a valid SATA device.
After 1/2 in the freezer it appears as a SATA device but I can't actually read anything from it. Doing fdisk /dev/sdc just results in lots of errors in dmesg that it can't read from the device.
Fortunately I had only recently upgraded it from a 1TB drive which I found sitting on the workbench with nearly all of the data on it.
I think that the only extra files saved between the upgrade and now are backups from my laptop, which is still working fine.
So basically I lost nothing.
So what is the toughest most reliable drive that I can buy? 2TB should do it. My desktop computer has a 4TB drive and my idea is to set up a script to rsync the data from the server to a backup partition in the desktop every time I use it.
It doesn't need to be particularly high performance, it is attached to a miniITX motherboard with a fanless processor so quite low power, which boots off a small SSD running debian of course.
I think it must have cooked the 2TB Seagate drive with all the data on it.
Initially it wouldn't even appear as a valid SATA device.
After 1/2 in the freezer it appears as a SATA device but I can't actually read anything from it. Doing fdisk /dev/sdc just results in lots of errors in dmesg that it can't read from the device.
Fortunately I had only recently upgraded it from a 1TB drive which I found sitting on the workbench with nearly all of the data on it.
I think that the only extra files saved between the upgrade and now are backups from my laptop, which is still working fine.
So basically I lost nothing.
So what is the toughest most reliable drive that I can buy? 2TB should do it. My desktop computer has a 4TB drive and my idea is to set up a script to rsync the data from the server to a backup partition in the desktop every time I use it.
It doesn't need to be particularly high performance, it is attached to a miniITX motherboard with a fanless processor so quite low power, which boots off a small SSD running debian of course.
- sunrat
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
Exactly. They are most likely to die when they are new in which case you may claim warranty, or from old age.Segfault wrote:Any hard drive can die any time.
A good backup strategy involves at least two copies of data. A single copy is only good for data you don't care if you lose. Personally I have 2 computers at home with the same data on both mirrored between them with Syncthing. These both have WD Black drives which are fast but noisy so the Reds may be better. I also regularly use rsync to make a third copy to external drives, the main one being a WD Blue 4TB in an eSATA case.
“ computer users can be divided into 2 categories:
Those who have lost data
...and those who have not lost data YET ” Remember to BACKUP!
Those who have lost data
...and those who have not lost data YET ” Remember to BACKUP!
- eor2004
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
According to this Backblaze report, Hitachi (HGST), Western Digital and some Toshiba's are the most reliable, Seagate being the worst, in my personal experience this is true!
https://www.backblaze.com/blog/what-har ... uld-i-buy/
https://www.backblaze.com/blog/what-har ... uld-i-buy/
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LMDE 6 on a Panasonic ToughBook CF-C1 Laptop.
Bodhi Linux 7 on a HP Compaq DC5750 Small Form Factor PC.
Windows 11 on a Intel DH55TC PC.
Re: reliable drive for home storage?
I wasn't going to go there but since you said it . . . my experience also.eor2004 wrote:Seagate being the worst, in my personal experience this is true!
May the FORK be with you!
- NFT5
- df -h | grep > 20TiB
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
Agree.golinux wrote:I wasn't going to go there but since you said it . . . my experience also.eor2004 wrote:Seagate being the worst, in my personal experience this is true!
I've had very good runs with WD Blue and Toshiba
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
Is the server case fanless too ? Could the drive have died from over-heating due to insufficient cooling ?dieselnutjob wrote:it is attached to a miniITX motherboard with a fanless processor
Agreed. And if it does not die completely, it can have bad blocks.Segfault wrote:Any hard drive can die any time.
Or redundancy, aka RAID.Segfault wrote:Only foolproof backup policy can keep your data intact.
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
Thanks all. I have ordered a 3Tb WD red on Amazon.
As the Seagate is only a few months old is it worth pursuing a warranty claim?
As the Seagate is only a few months old is it worth pursuing a warranty claim?
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
The case has a fan and also the power supply. Also I did make sure that one was pulling air in and the other pushing it out so they complement each other rather than fighting each other.
The fans are still working fine.
The fans are still working fine.
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
dieselnutjob wrote:Thanks all. I have ordered a 3Tb WD red on Amazon.
As the Seagate is only a few months old is it worth pursuing a warranty claim?
Yes.
Good luck for the warranty when the Western Dumpsterfire just up and dies with no SMART warnings though. WD customer service is utter crap compared to Seagate. At least they used to be, I doubt they've improved. They tried to deny the warranty claim on one of my drives installed on a customers PC because their software didn't say the drive was bad..... when it was a failed boot drive not even recognized by the BIOS, and thus couldn't even RUN the software
Customer Service with WD was always like pulling teeth. Screw em and their drives the literally drop out and die during mid transfer with zero pre-fail warning signs. At least seagates will warn you weeks to months that they are failing 95% of the time, and Customer Service is easy peasy.
fortune -o
Your love life will be... interesting.
How did it know?
The U.S. uses the metric system too, we have tenths, hundredths and thousandths of inches
Your love life will be... interesting.
How did it know?
The U.S. uses the metric system too, we have tenths, hundredths and thousandths of inches
Re: reliable drive for home storage?
RAID won't guarantee your data is safe. It can still be destroyed in case of PEBCAK or in case some virus infected Windows computer has write access to it, or whatnot. Even the RAID itself can die, it is quite usual when one drive dies then the rebuild process is too much load for other drives and another one goes tits up.
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
or the server overheats and destroys all of the discs in the RAID array....
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
I know that RAID is not a backup, and the room can burn, and so on... But if I read correctly the OP is looking for a reliable storage, not for a complete backup solution. RAID provides just that. It seems that the file server using this storage is already part of a backup solution.
Re: reliable drive for home storage?
Never had any issues with WD warranty, for me it has been a matter of using their web site to apply for replacement and they always sent me an RMA right away. You can go to warranty check and using the serial see if your drive has any warranty and start replacement process.
- eor2004
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Re: reliable drive for home storage?
+1Segfault wrote:Never had any issues with WD warranty, for me it has been a matter of using their web site to apply for replacement and they always sent me an RMA right away. You can go to warranty check and using the serial see if your drive has any warranty and start replacement process.
Debian 12 Gnome on a MSI H61M-P25 (B3) PC & on a Dell Latitude E6410 & HP EliteBook 8540p Laptops.
LMDE 6 on a Panasonic ToughBook CF-C1 Laptop.
Bodhi Linux 7 on a HP Compaq DC5750 Small Form Factor PC.
Windows 11 on a Intel DH55TC PC.
LMDE 6 on a Panasonic ToughBook CF-C1 Laptop.
Bodhi Linux 7 on a HP Compaq DC5750 Small Form Factor PC.
Windows 11 on a Intel DH55TC PC.