IronWolf Pro is designed for everything business NAS. Get used to tough, ready, and scalable 24x7 performance that can handle multidrive environments across a wide range of capacities up to 18TB.
IronWolf Pro internal hard drives are the ideal solution for up to 24-bay network attached storage (NAS), multi-user NAS server environments that demand powerhouse performance. IronWolf provides a workload rate of 300TB/year.
Seagate Rescue Data Recovery are included on every Ironwolf Pro NAS hard drive purchased and shipped January 1, 2020 or later. Ironwolf Pro comes with a 90% success rate of in-house recovery, Seagate has your back with a 3-year included Rescue Data Recovery plan.
Improved total cost of ownership (TCO) over desktop drives with reduced maintenance costs backed by Ironwolf Pro's 5-year limited warranty and long-term reliability with 1.2M hours MTBF.
Actively protect your NAS with IronWolf Health Management focusing on prevention, intervention, and recovery from 4TB and up.
Optimized for NAS with AgileArray. AgileArray enables dual-plane balancing and RAID optimization in multi-bay environments, with the most advanced power management possible.
Actively protect your NAS with IronWolf Health Management focusing on prevention, intervention, and recovery.
High performance means no lag time or downtime for users during workload traffic for the NAS. Seagate leads the competition with the highest-performing NAS drive portfolio.
Seagate Rescue Data Recovery. IronWolf Pro comes with extra peace of mind for any mechanical, accidental, or natural disaster. With a 90% success rate of in-house recovery, Seagate has your back with a 3-year included Rescue Data Recovery plan.
Rotational Vibration (RV) sensors. First in its class of drives to include RV sensors to maintain high performance in multi-drive NAS enclosures.
Range of capacities up to 18TB. More capacity options means more choices that will fit within the budget. Seagate provides a scalable solution for any NAS use-case scenario.
Do more in multi-user environments. IronWolf provides a workload rate of 300TB/year. Multiple users can confidently upload and download data to the NAS server, knowing IronWolf can handle the workload, whether you are a creative professional or a small business.
Designed for always on, always accessible 24x7 performance. Access data on your NAS any time, remotely or on site.
1.2M hours MTBF represents an improved total cost of ownership (TCO) over desktop drives with reduced maintenance costs.
Pros: The Seagate IronWorlf Pro 14 TB mechanical hard drive is awesome! Nothing beats the mechanical hard drive when it comes to large storage, redundant arrays in any flavor (read: RAID), or any other needs in which a single piece of hardware is needed to consolidate large amounts of information. Really the only thing separating the very large capacity (as of this writing) mechanical hard drives is the quality of the drive itself and a proven track record or reliability. The 14 TB IronWolf Pro provides this.
For the specifics you get what you would expect from a 3.5” mechanical hard drive of this capacity – it spins at 7200 rpm, connects via SATA 3, and offers 256 MB of cache. All of these things are pretty typical for enterprise mechanical hard drives in the multi-terabyte range.
Seagate IronWolf mechanical drives (this one included) boast the label of being approved for use in several home and small office reputable NAS vendors. This ensures a nice plug-and-play for expanding a SOHO NAS.
Cons: Having 14 TB crammed into the 3.5” housing may cause some warmer temperatures than other smaller capacity drives. Of course your individual NAS enclosure, rack, or computer case mounting will definitely dictate this as well. No loss of any eggs.
Overall Review: The IronWolf Pro series of drive differ from Seagate’s other mechanical drive offerings in that this drive is marketed toward the always-on NAS market. Anyone should check with their NAS vendor to ensure that this model/size drive is compatible with their current solution before purchasing.
Some people have complained about the ‘abnormal screw pattern/layout’ on this drive. Here’s the obvious news flash – this drive, and several other multi-terabyte drives from Seagate and other large manufacturers, have altered the screw positioning for a few years now, and eliminated the center screw in some instances, due to the amount of platters in the 3.5” housing (thus enabling more TB). As more of these drives reach the consuming market place and become more common, and as prices reduce, this “observation” among mechanical hard drive buyers has received more attention. The fact is that this move to different screw patterns has been slowing happening over the past few years.
Pros: Huge capacity of 14 TERABYTES though only 13 usable
Designed to be always on 24/7
2 year data recovery service and 5 year warranty
All the stuff you expect from a quality hard drive
Cons: Drive clicks a lot when the heads are parked, not a huge issue just a little chirp.
Overall Review: Drive is about as fast as mechanical gets with extra durability as it's designed to run 24/7. Despite being ran all the time the drive runs cool and quiet for the most part except with the chirp but my NAS isn't in the same room as me so it's not that big of a deal
Initially i had a lot of trouble getting this drive to work, disk management crashed on me while initializing the drive and i had to remove it and plug it into another computer and use seagates software to initialize it, after that it was plug and play.
My drive does not get hot although i only use my nas to backup movies, games and a few folders for work but it's handy to have a lot of storage on a network because using usb drives can be a pain.
These drives do indeed use an alternate pattern for screwholes but that's sort of been a thing for awhile now and gaining popularity. It has to do with drive capacity and needing more space where the middle screw is. Luckily there is 2 more screws on the end to use and i have not seen a hard drive cage not have those holes as long as it's made within this decade.
Pros: - Packaging was great.
- Surprised how hefty the drive is.
- Copied 2 SSDs and 4 hard disk drives onto this drive and the contents hardly registered.
- There was hardly any noise during copying or accessing data.
- If you need massive amounts of storage in one drive, this is it.
- 5 Year warranty.
Cons: - Minor noise when heads are parked, but this is minor.
- If you have as many fans as I do, you won't even hear it. I disabled some of my fans during this review.
Overall Review: I never thought I would see the day that a 14 TB drive would be available on the consumer level. This gives you the opportunity to have a huge amount of storage in a small package. I will use this to backup my entire home network. This will also be a boom to folks requiring massive storage in a small form factor. This is a fantastic unit.
Pros: It worked out of the box.
4 TB (really 3.6 TB)
Cons: - Longevity is unknown, when first plugged in, it had a click that went away.
Overall Review: Bought to put into computer with 100's of movies on it (no internet mountain house computer). Had 4 smaller drives in it and ran out of space.
Hard drives in general, gone are the days when 97% of the hard drives worked out of the box and for years. Now it seems like they all have 10 to 15% that fail within a year. Most people review after they first get, so that 10 to 15% most likely is higher. I have several hard drives that are 10+ years old, I am sure some are 20 years old. I had a spare 1 TB hard drive that I took out of the box last month (bought 2 years ago), yes you guessed it - was a dud. Just look at the reviews of all computer parts, rolling the dice on everything. What has happened to quality?
Have Had Great Luck With IronWolf Pros5/7/2020 3:05:14 PM
Pros: - Fast, Reliable, Large Drives
- Data Recovery
- Enterprise Class / 7200 RPM
Cons: - None so far
Overall Review: When first deciding if I was going to use Seagate or WD it was a toss-up. There's great reviews and bad for both. I decided on the Synology IronWolf Pros since they're 7200 RPM vs 5200 for WD.
I've had three drives running constantly for about two years without a hitch. Added 5 more drives to my NAS. It's only been a short time on the new drives, but its nice that besides S.M.A.R.T., Seagate offers their own diagnostics if your device supports it (Synology NAS does). Also with Pro you get 1 or 2 year data recovery.
Some people say large HDDs or Seagate is unreliable. I've found if you purchase the high-end/enterprise drives, mean time between failure rates are high and they've been quite reliable for me. Will update if that changes.
Good luck getting one that works...8/16/2021 12:55:57 PM
Pros: - Large Storage for a reasonable price
Cons: - After 2 tries I couldn't get a working drive and gave up
Overall Review: I ordered an ST6000NE000 to replace a failing 3TB Seagate Desktop drive that was in my NAS (after 6 years of operation).
I paid overnight shipping and received it the next day, inserted the drive and over the next 12 - 18 hours the drive was rebuilt. Immediately after the rebuild completed the new drive started logging increasing numbers of "Reallocated Sectors". Over the next 24 hours it reached over 19000 reallocated sectors.
I submitted a refund request for the drive on a Thursday morning and ordered another one with overnight shipping in order to expedite getting a replacement drive. The replacement drive arrived on Monday (so much for overnight) and I plugged it into the NAS only to find that the new one is completely DOA. It won't even spin up - it just buzzes like the motor is trying to spin up but never does. Just to be sure, I tried connecting it to another computer with the same results.
So now I'm 0/2 and I really don't think I can bring myself to order ANOTHER drive only to find out it's broken as well.
I guess if you win the inventory lottery and get one that actually works properly, maybe you'll have a good experience.
Unacceptable failure rate as far as I'm concerned Seagate - you need to improve your manufacturing QA or something.
Manufacturer Response:
Hello Ryan,
We regret to hear about your experience with the Seagate Ironwolf internal drive. We’re certainly sorry you’ve encountered this circumstance.
We strive to deliver our products in the best possible quality. It cannot be avoided, however, that despite extensive tests and quality checks, a product may be defective even as a new build. We apologize for having had this experience.
If you need assistance with the Seagate drives, please contact us via the following link and we shall be happy to assist in the best way possible:
https://support2.seagate.com/?language=en-us
Kind Regards,
Kalyan
Seagate Support
Pros: -Easy to Install (as compared to other storage options)-Fast! I replaced an 11 year old 2TB WD Black and the IronWolf Pro is easily four times as fast when I search through my stored photos.-Cheap, when compared to drive prices just a few years ago-Long life expectancy-5yr warrenty
Cons: When used as a storage drive, none. There are faster drives or cheaper drives, but you're not going to find a faster and cheaper drive!
Overall Review: If you're looking for a replacement storage drive this is a great option. Even when used as a regular PC drive and not in a NAS.
Anonymous
Ownership: 1 week to 1 month
Verified Owner
Worst experience10/9/2021 10:19:19 AM
Overall Review: Worst experience. Wasted my 2 weeks sending back and trying new disk. Returns it fully and bought from Best Buy which came in official package and working great
Manufacturer Response:
Hello,
We regret to hear about your experience with the
Seagate IronWolf Pro 10TB NAS Hard Drive 7200 RPM 256MB Cache CMR SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal HDD ST10000NE0008. We’re certainly sorry you’ve encountered this circumstance. Generally, the packaging of the product, with regards to shipping from the seller to your location, is the responsibility of the retailer. Although this part is out of our control, we can empathize with your frustration. Glad that you replaced it and the product is working fine.
If convenient, we would love to speak with you in regards to the situation behind the return and offer our professional services to improve your opinion on Seagate product solutions. You can use the link below to create a support case online and please be sure to reference the following email address so we can easily find your post.
Reference this email address: anonymous.newegg@social.inv
Additionally, please provide a link to this review.
If you wish to contact us please create a case with our technical support team at the following link:
https://support2.seagate.com/?language=en-us
Kind regards,
Subha,
Seagate Support.
Pros: The Seagate IronWorlf Pro 14 TB mechanical hard drive is awesome! Nothing beats the mechanical hard drive when it comes to large storage, redundant arrays in any flavor (read: RAID), or any other needs in which a single piece of hardware is needed to consolidate large amounts of information. Really the only thing separating the very large capacity (as of this writing) mechanical hard drives is the quality of the drive itself and a proven track record or reliability. The 14 TB IronWolf Pro provides this. For the specifics you get what you would expect from a 3.5” mechanical hard drive of this capacity – it spins at 7200 rpm, connects via SATA 3, and offers 256 MB of cache. All of these things are pretty typical for enterprise mechanical hard drives in the multi-terabyte range. Seagate IronWolf mechanical drives (this one included) boast the label of being approved for use in several home and small office reputable NAS vendors. This ensures a nice plug-and-play for expanding a SOHO NAS.
Cons: Having 14 TB crammed into the 3.5” housing may cause some warmer temperatures than other smaller capacity drives. Of course your individual NAS enclosure, rack, or computer case mounting will definitely dictate this as well. No loss of any eggs.
Overall Review: The IronWolf Pro series of drive differ from Seagate’s other mechanical drive offerings in that this drive is marketed toward the always-on NAS market. Anyone should check with their NAS vendor to ensure that this model/size drive is compatible with their current solution before purchasing. Some people have complained about the ‘abnormal screw pattern/layout’ on this drive. Here’s the obvious news flash – this drive, and several other multi-terabyte drives from Seagate and other large manufacturers, have altered the screw positioning for a few years now, and eliminated the center screw in some instances, due to the amount of platters in the 3.5” housing (thus enabling more TB). As more of these drives reach the consuming market place and become more common, and as prices reduce, this “observation” among mechanical hard drive buyers has received more attention. The fact is that this move to different screw patterns has been slowing happening over the past few years.