With black Friday sales coming up, I’m hoping to start building a NAS for my home. I have the server and stuff, but wondering which drives to get for storage.

From everything I’ve looked at, seems like Seagate Ironwolf and WD Red seem to be highly recommended. I’m leaning towards the Ironwolf 8TB drives right now. These are retailing for $160+tax right now, which I feel is a pretty good price to get these

However, I’m wondering if any of you experienced folks have any other suggestions for me.

Thanks!

  • gramathy@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Currently using WD red plus drives, once I get some financial freedom to expand probably going to switch to ultra stars or seagates unless I can get a good deal on red pros

  • good4y0uB
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    10 months ago

    I have 4x 10 TB WD reds white label I shucked from WD nas boxes.

    I also just picked up 2x 20 TB Seagate EXOS drives new for $200 ish on eBay sold by Newegg because I need to very rapidly find a solution for my 18TB unlimited Google drive that is going away in December.

  • webbkoreyB
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    10 months ago

    I’ve got 10 12tb Seagate EXOS drives in operation right now and have also run small capacity (2-4tb) WD Red and blue and Seagate Barracuda drives. For ssds I run Samsung 870 evos.

  • HearthCore
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    10 months ago

    Working Network Accessible Storage is done by a Virtualized TrueNAS Instance on my ProxMox Host with all Services attached to it through internal networking arrangements or direct access through MountPoints in LXC

    The TrueNAS currently has 4TB SSD Storage

    Then there’s the backup NAS with 12TB HDD Storage for slow Media Storage and Backup of working NAS files.

    My Media Streaming is attached to the 12TB NAS while Nextcloud is attached to both, for example.

  • ItsMeBrandon_GB
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    10 months ago

    I bought 20+ Recertified Class Western Digital WDC H530 14tb’s for 126.99$ each from serverpartsdeals.com over the last six months. Comes with a 2 year warranty, which is about what you would expect a drive to have anyways.

    I also have a dozen Ironwolf 12tb’s (no pro) which have 3yr warranty, but still, if I had new about the recertified drives then I would’ve been all over those.

    Really its about how much space do you need, how many SATA slots can you fill, and your use for them.

  • JoaGamoB
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    10 months ago

    Whatever is CMR and good enough. WD red, Ironwolf, etc

    I’ve got a lot of random hdds, highest capacity are 4TBs ones, all in ceph nodes

  • AllTheModzAreCancerB
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    10 months ago

    WD Gold 10TB but I miss the HGST Ultrastar days (before WD got them) HGST added something when they took IBM’s disk drive business, but something was lost when WD acquired them.

    I’m a noob too, but I can tell you that you need to keep in mind the purpose of your NAS. Ask yourself this: am I storing archives that will probably not be accessed much, or am I hosting a filesharing service or streaming or something else that will need a bigger cache and more RPMs? Also try to prioritize CMR over SMR.

    When I built my NAS 3 years ago I bought a used SuperMicro MB, a used Xeon CPU, used ECC RAM, and it’s still going strong. My WD Gold drives were new of course, but you can find some good deals on used drives too. Just make sure that you take into account not only the hours on the drive but reads, writes, and stop/starts too. Also look at the seller’s rep to see if they have a history of reprogramming the ROM to show a false SMART.

    Hopefully you are using SMR ram and a ZFS filesystem. TrueNAS is a great OS that uses openZFS and RAIDZ. If you are using lower-end or used NAS drives then consider using more parity drives than if you were to use new, enterprise quality drives.