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Best Seller Ranking | #15 in Desktop Internal Hard Drives |
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Brand | WD |
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Series | Red Pro |
Model | WD161KFGX |
Interface | SATA 6.0Gb/s |
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Capacity | 16TB |
Recording Technology | CMR |
RPM | 7200 RPM |
Cache | 512MB |
Features | 3D Active Balance Plus Our enhanced dual-plane balance control technology significantly improves the overall drive performance and reliability. Hard drives that are not properly balanced may cause excessive vibration and noise in a multi-drive system, reduce the hard drive life span, and degrade the performance over time. Error Recovery Prevention Built specifically for RAID and NAS environments, WD Red Pro drives come equipped with error recovery controls as part of NASware 3.0 technology to help reduce drive fallout in RAID applications. Extended Drive Testing A NAS environment that has up to 24 bays is very demanding on a hard drive with added vibration and heat. This is why every WD Red Pro drive is shipped with extended thermal cycle burn-in testing to help ensure each drive is tested for extended reliable operation. Desktop drives vs. WD Red Pro Do right by your NAS and choose the drive purpose-built for NAS with an array of features to help preserve your data and maintain optimum performance. Take the following into consideration when choosing a hard drive for your NAS: - Compatibility: Unlike desktop drives, these drives are specifically tested for compatibility with NAS systems for optimum performance. - Reliability: The always-on environment of a NAS or RAID is a hot one, and desktop drives aren't typically designed and tested under those conditions like WD Red Pro drives are. - Error Recovery Controls: WD Red Pro NAS hard drives are specifically designed with RAID error recovery control to help reduce failures within the NAS system. - Noise and Vibration Protection: Designed to operate solo, desktop drives typically offer little or no protection from the noise and vibration present in a multi-drive system. WD Red Pro drives are designed to thrive in multi-bay NAS system environments. |
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Usage | Enterprise NAS Hard Drives |
Form Factor | 3.5" |
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Height (maximum) | 26.10mm |
Width (maximum) | 101.60mm |
Length (maximum) | 147.00mm |
Date First Available | December 17, 2020 |
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Pros: - The drive handle a continuous streaming of at lest 100 MBs/s
Cons: Nothing found so far. I cannot comment for long term since I do have this HD for 2 weeks.
Overall Review: This drive was installed along with 3 other Western digital black hard disk in the TerraMaster enclosure connected throught an Ethernet cable directely to my computer. In total, the TerraMaster enclosure served 24 TBs of its maximum capacity of 64TBs. The download of a 2 TBs folder to the enclosure connecting this Western Digital pro HD run very smothly at a continuous speed above 100 MBs/s (1 GBaud) without stop. This enclosure with the WD RED Pro HD is part of an application which continuously save data from a very fast data acquisition system. A total of 9 TBs per week is saved in the HDs connected by the TerraMaster enclosure. So far, after 2 weeks (18TBs) the drives served the application beautifully. ,
Pros: - Fast, quiet, cool - 6 HDDs (4x these WD Red Pros and 2x WD Blue 1TB 7200rpm) + SSD in the back chamber of Fractal Design Node 804 so the space is pretty crammed, and monitoring shows drive temps in low to mid 30s even during a large transfer of data. - 256MB cache - so far, no issues (*knock on wood) for 4 of these I got. 4 of these in RAID10 with a budget RAID controller (Startech / Marvell), as I run another set of raid 0 drives on the same server and ran out of onboard SATA ports. 4x 4TB in RAID 10 game me ~7.25TB usable space...I think the budget Marvell RAID controller is limiting performance a tiny bit, but eitherway, through my 1Gbit network I can only do ~120MB/s transfers anyway... local SSD to the RAID10 array transfers anywhere between 350MB/s to 400MB/s depending on what I'm transferring.
Cons: - not the cheapest 4TB 7200rpm on the market? but that's about it... please last a long time and don't give me a reason to come back and add a con here
Overall Review: - I originally got Toshiba N300 4TB 7200rpm drives because they were $109 each at the time (vs $169 each for the WD Red Pro) which are "NAS grade" drives that are supposed to be reliable / dependable like the WD Reds are... but 3 out of 4 of the Toshiba units started getting bad sectors within 2 weeks of service 2 of which had over 400~500 bad sectors by the time I RMA'ed them.I since them got the WD Red Pros, and these have been rock solid for a little over 3 months or so now. Aside from the quality difference, the Toshibas ran pretty loud and clicky - maybe that was a sign from the getgo that those were bad drives.. and the toshiba drives ran a bit warmer too. so in my book, you do get what you pay for with the more expensive WD Reds.. - WD is the most reliable / dependable HDD I've used...
Pros: Quiet enough to not disappoint me.
Cons: Heavy
Overall Review: When choosing a new HDD to replace dying ST2000DM001, I mostly had two concerns: 1) noise; 2) manufacture date. As to the manufacture date, I was afraid that my future disk might be kind of not new or even refurbished. But it turned out to be really new. I ordered in the beginning of June 2020, and the label shows the date of April 07, 2020. So, really new. As to the noise, I also was not disappointed. Although it is considerably louder than my old ST2000DM001, but still quiet enough, and waaay more silent than my other disk Toshiba P300 HDWD130XZSTA (3TB), the latter being real drum-roll. To those worrying about the noise - keep in mind, that the noise produced by a HDD depends very much on the particular place where it is mounted. If it is noisy, try to move it to other bay or place. You even can put it on the very bottom of your case and place some rubber pillows under it. And not use metal screws but rubber strings. In my experience, upper bins/locations give less noise. It is a matter of acoustics.
Pros: 7200rpm extra vibration protection 5 year warranty
Cons: I just upgraded my Synology DS214Play NAS from two 2TB Western Digital Red Drives to two 8TB Western Digital Red Pro Drives. The new drives are definitely noisier than the old drives. I constantly hear a clunking sound every 5 to 10 seconds coming from the NAS when it is idle. I never had this problem with the old drives. I read on line reviews that said the Pros were noisier than the non Pro drives that is an understatement! I also feel some vibration when touching the NAS, never had that issue before.
Overall Review: I purchased these drives due to their robust specs and warranty. I would not recommend these drives for home use unless your NAS is in a separate room or closet. Purchase the Western Digital Red non-Pro drives instead. Keep in mind the read and write access time will be a little slower with the RED drives as they spin at 5400rpm. The Pros are good drives you just need to aware of their use case which is more enterprise oriented.
Overall Review: Great fast drive(s), no issues so far (used for ~2 weeks). Running in a Synology DS 918+ on Synology Hybrid Raid (SHR). I'm using two of these, and two (2) 12TB Seagate Ironwolf NAS drives for a total of 4 drives. Everything plays very nice. The bottle neck in my machine is definitely the LAN port capped at only 1 Gbps, which is no fault of the drives themselves.
Pros: Reliable, and reasonable speed.
Cons: Expensive
Overall Review: I have 4 reds that are 8 years old now and still performing great. I hope these red pro are the same quality. We shall see how they perform over time.
Pros: I received the new drive surprisingly quickly after I ordered it. Installation was very straightforward, just sliding it into an open drive bay in my Synology Diskstation, next to the 2TB drive already in place, and now I've got 8TB of free disk space. This space is all I'll need for Apple TimeMachine backups from 3 macbookss.
Cons: It would have been nice had there been four little screws included, with which to mount the drive in the enclosure. I ended up borrowing screws from another drive.
Overall Review: I'd certainly recommend this drive to others, and Newegg provides great selection, quality products, and rapid delivery.
Pros: Trusted BrandTrusted ReliabilityPerformance see overall review.WarrantyRelatively quiet
Cons: Expensive
Overall Review: I purchased this HDD in March 2021 along with an WD Ultrastar 18TB. In my Raid boxes a Drobo and Synoloy I have started making a point of trying to by different brand / models HDD's as I add storage just in case a defect in one line will not destroy my entire storage array. I have found the Pro series to be slightly noisier than the Plus / original regular RED's and a bit quieter than the Ultrastars. Heat is kind of similar based one feeling the front of the HDD while is mounted in its RAID enclosure. The first thing I did after this hard drive arrived was check CrystalDiskInfo to check the drives specs and make sure it was all good. It had a power on count of 1 (since I powered it on) and everything else was perfect and new. Hard drive Speed Compare: All testing was done with an external enclosure using CrystalDiskMark and a direct file copy (about 4GB) to the disk from an internal SSD.WD Red Pro 18TB: Seq Read 267 MB/s, Seq Write 266 MB/s, Copy 260 MB/sWD Ultrastar HC550 18TB: Seq Read 269 MB/s, Seq Write 268 MB/s, Copy 274 MB/sWD Red Plus 10TB WD101EFAX: Seq Read 218 MB/s, Seq Write 219 MB/s, Copy 80 MB/sWD Ultrastar HC510 10TB: Seq Read: 259 MB/s, Seq Write 263 MB/s, Copy 250 MB/sWD Red 10TB WD100EFRX: Seq Read: 200 MB/s, Seq Write 116 MB/s, Copy 186 MB/sSpeed comparison for reference. This is just a small selection of my hard drives that I have owned and have tested.I think I will be very happy with this expansive HDD.