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Forum Discussion
miogpsrocks
Apr 28, 2017Tutor
Are Archive hard Drives ok for Readynas?
Are Archive hard Drives(aka Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) ok for Readynas? They kind of overlap the magnetic strips like shingles, and have a double wide reader/writer head or something lik...
StephenB
Apr 28, 2017Guru - Experienced User
There was a flood of issues and discussion here when these drives first came onto the market. Netgear did make some disk driver patches in the ReadyNAS at the time to overcome some of the issues. After that discusssion died down - not sure if that was because 8 TB PMR drives came onto the market, or if there were other reasons.
jak0lantash wrote:
That said, these drives are built for 24/7 operation and archive. So if you want to use your ReadyNAS for true archiving, which I doubt, then maybe. Otherwise, I really wouldn't use these drives in a ReadyNAS.
RAID sync also presents obvious problems. If you must use the drive in the NAS, then creating a separate JBOD and storing archival material in those shares is the safest approach. Then avoid maintenance functions like balance, defrag, etc.
miogpsrocks
Apr 28, 2017Tutor
StephenB wrote:There was a flood of issues and discussion here when these drives first came onto the market. Netgear did make some disk driver patches in the ReadyNAS at the time to overcome some of the issues. After that discusssion died down - not sure if that was because 8 TB PMR drives came onto the market, or if there were other reasons.
.
So how does it stand today after the patches? The drives technical work but still not recommended?
- StephenBApr 28, 2017Guru - Experienced User
miogpsrocks wrote:
So how does it stand today after the patches? The drives technical work but still not recommended?
As I said before, some users found them acceptable, others didn't.
My own recommendation is not to use them.
- itsjasperApr 28, 2017Luminary
Don't use Archive drives in the NAS.
Feel free to use them to back up the NAS, however (in a single external case or dual case in JBOD config).
I'm not seeing a huge amount of price difference between the Seagate Archive drives and the Seagate IronWolf NAS drives these days, here in Australia you're talking $298 vs $309 AUD for a 6TB drive.
- miogpsrocksApr 29, 2017Tutor
Ok, I will not use in the NAS or the TIVO. I guess I must use as intended connected to my PC as a general data backup.
Maybe I will open some of the other externals hard drives to see if maybe they have an non-archive hard drive.
Thanks.
- StephenBApr 29, 2017Guru - Experienced User
You'd be better off with WDC Red or Seagate IronWolf in the NAS, even if they cost a bit more.
Back when SMR was a hot topic here, there weren't many 8 TB PMR drives on the market, and they were all extremely expensive. Now the cutting edge is 12 TB PMR, and 8 TB NAS-purposed or enterprise drives are much more affordable.
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