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The Seagate IronWolf 4TB Internal Hard Drive is engineered for NAS environments, offering high performance with a 5400 RPM speed and 6GB/s interface. With a focus on reliability and efficiency, it features a 256MB cache and is designed to support multi-user access in up to 8-bay systems, ensuring optimal data management and sharing.
Brand | Seagate |
Product Dimensions | 14.71 x 10.19 x 2.62 cm; 490 g |
Item model number | ST4000VN006 |
Manufacturer | Seagate |
Series | IronWolf NAS HDD |
Colour | NAS HDD |
Form Factor | 3.5-inch |
Hard Drive Size | 4000 GB |
Hard Disk Description | Mechanical Hard Disk |
Hard Drive Interface | Serial ATA |
Hard Disk Rotational Speed | 5400 RPM |
Are Batteries Included | No |
Item Weight | 490 g |
Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
S**S
Exceptional Value & Performance
This review is for the Seagate IronWolf 4Tb model. Amazon groups reviews for drives of varying capacities for the same model family together, so hence the clarification.My first experience of a Seagate internal drive was when I purchased the 8Tb Ironwolf a couple months back (See my review here on Amazon). Since then, the drive has functioned perfectly. That drive is being used in my NAS and since the review of that drive, I have upgraded my 13 year old NAS to a new unit.However, i recently reached a point where I was running low on space on my existing 4 WD Red 4Tb drives, so wanted to add another WD Red 40EFRX model. Searching Amazon and other resellers, I couldn't find this exact model available any more, since being replaced by the WD Red Plus 40EFZX. I wanted matched drives, despite my new NAS using a RAID implementation not demanding this. However, being perhaps old fashioned, I really wanted identical drives.What to do?Well, I could add value to my old NAS by installing the 4 WD Red's I have and sell it. With that goal in mind, I looked to replace the WD's with new 4Tb Ironwolf's. Having been impressed with the 8Tb Ironwolf I have as a stand alone drive in my NAS, I was further tempted by the 20% cheaper 4Tb Ironwolf's compared to the WD Red Plus equivalents, no mean saving when looking to purchase 5 of them!Amazon was selling the Seagate Ironwolf's for just £80 at the time of purchase. This was just too good a deal to ignore, so I purchased 3 of them. Oddly, and something I've never encountered before, Amazon was restricting my purchase to a maximum of just 3. There appeared no stock limitations to account for this, though. That put me in a pickle, but thankfully the wife had her own Amazon account and so I was able to obtain the remaining couple of drives at the aforementioned excellent price.So, how do these compare to my old WD's?Before that, a word on packaging. I've read a few reviews on Amazon complaining about how Amazon ship drives. Be assured that all 5 of the drives ordered, as well as the 8Tb one a couple of months back, all arrived in robust boxes.Perhaps the most surprising thing about these 4Tb Ironwolf's is their size. They are noticeably smaller and lighter than my old WD's. The casing appears slimmer, especially towards the connector end of the drive. They still conform to standards, so will fit into systems, but I'd never seen a drive so noticeably different in its size before. The WD drives definitely feel heavier and more solid, but they are 5 years old, so perhaps use more platters to achieve the same capacity, I'm not sure.I haven't benchmarked these drives, but I understand these Ironwolf's are faster than their WD counterparts and are, of course, all CMR type drives. They also boast an impressive cache size for such a relatively low capacity drive at 256Mb. The newest WD equivalent offers half of that, The Ironwolf also runs around 20MB/sec faster transfer rate at around 200 Megabytes/sec compared to my older WD's.These 5 new drives have all gone through many hours of cloning functions as I sequentially replaced each WD in my array with a new Ironwolf and then an 18.5 hours RAID expansion when adding the fifth drive. All has gone well.These drives run cool and quiet, although they are still noisier than my old WD's. I can hear the seek on these where I was unable to hear anything on the WD's I had before. Nothing major at all, but noteworthy all the same. On a slight tangent, when discussing noise levels, the 8Tb Ironwolf I do have ticks away when idle. It makes a click sound about every 6 seconds or so, so that may bother those seeking a higher capacity model in quiet environments. However, this characteristic is shared with my external 14Tb WD Elements drive, so I believe this clicking is a function of higher capacity drives. The 4Tb drives reviewed here do not exhibit such clicking sounds when idle an spinning.My new NAS now uses a pair of 120mm fans as opposed to the single on the old NAS. This appears to keep drive temperatures nice and low, even the 8Tb 7,200rpm Iron Wolf I was slightly concerned about when running in my old NAS, the temperature differential so far being only an extra 2 or 3C over the 5,400rpm Ironwolfs in the new NAS.For those like me installing these 4Tb Ironwolf's into their Synology NAS's, a word of warning. On my DSM 7.1 system, these new 4Tb Ironwolf's(Model: ST4000VNZ06) appear not to have the Seagate Ironwolf health Management feature available to DSM. The 8Tb IronWolf I have has this feature show up fine in DSM 7.1. As far as I know, IHM (IronWolf Health management) is a feature of all IronWolf drives, but I may be wrong on that front. Either way, if this model does come with that feature, Synology's DSM 7.1 currently cannot recognize it, so you will be limited to only an S.M.A.R.T test option on those.Other than that, those Seagate IronWolf 4Tb drives still offer excellent value for money and, so far, the 5 I have are working fine. As on my 8Tb review, I will update this one should any of the drives fail within, or soon after, the 3 year warranty period.In summary, these 4Tb IronWolf drives offer exceptional value for money along with excellent performance. At current prices, they are a tempting option for those wanting a desktop hard drive in the form of the WD Blue or Seagate Barracuda ranges. You will get superior performance and better reliability with these over their desktop counterparts.
C**S
Long time IronWolf Pro user. 5 x 16TB in new Synology DS1522+ in RAID 6
As per the title, the IronWolf Pro has long been my drive of choice for performance, and 5 year warranty, though never yet to take advantage of that.Drives are 7200rpm with good cache size allowing then to be used as 'regular' hard drives, particular for offline critical backups.My latest purchase was 5 x 16TB IronWolf Pros for a new Synology DS1522+ NAS. Not on the official drive list but work perfectly. I went for the 16TB as it was the most cost effective whilst also giving me my desired storage.I have the 5 x 16TB drives configured in RAID6 to allow for a double drive failure, giving me 48 TB of effective space. This is over a 5 times increase in storage from my previous ultra reliable Buffalo TeraStations where the hardware never failed but the 3TB drives used in them did, 4 at the worst possible times with cascade failures during array rebuild. Fortunately I had a backup synced NAS, but it took over a week to get operational again.The RAID6 offers a 2 out of 5 drive Parity calculation, and thus fault tolerance of 2 drives failing simultaneously. Just in case, I backup to 2 x 18TB Exos drives on a regular basis.The IronWolf Pros are noisy in use because of their fast seek speed, especially when 5 drives are seeking at the same time. Temperatures stay good on medium cooling option.I have yet to have an IronWolf Pro fail and hope that continues! Recommended!
S**E
Great drive
Great drive at a good price, used in a nas for media streaming. Nice and quiet and quite fast for a traditional hard drive
K**E
Does the job
Solid reliable drives for a NAS at a reasonable price
T**D
Genuine Seagates with full Warranty.
Arrived in plenty of time to test considering testing takes 6 hours for a 4TB drive and I bought 2. Well packed by Amazon in a suitable box in their little unbleached Seagate boxes with Manual and Warranty card. You dont get those from Marketplace sellers according to some of the reviews I have seen or new drives. Marketplace sellers tend to sell used drives with SMART reset and hardly any warranty left from crypto farms. These are the Genuine deal with full warranty as I have registered them.Update: Was advised by Seagate support to replace the two received as raw read errors were high for a new drive which was done next day by Amazon. But have since learned this is normal behaviour and its not errors its a count of reads. Pity Seagate support 1st line didn't know this.Performance is good, doing a full surface scan with Victoria HD and reading at 200MB/s on average and fast responsive sectors which you would expect from a new drive. Using in a USB dock which is the easiest installation there is and they will become backup drives for my PCs and Laptop with enough storage for all.
C**T
Good NAS drive
Excellent hard disks, suited for NAS operations.Delivered very well packaged, and presented. Worked as expected, so no complaint. Will be interesting to see how they last
S**E
Works well and is not noisy
Following a lightning strike, my original 4 TB IronWolf drive was damaged and replaced with an 8TB drive. So far, there have been no problems. The noise level is low and not picked up by my microphone while recording.The drive is quicker than I can save things, so it is an excellent drive for me. All I have to do now is prevent lightning from destroying it. The UPS was supposed to protect it but was also fried—the problem of living with overhead electrical supply cables and many thunderstorms per year.
M**H
Not a new HDD
Works well no issues
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