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Specifically designed for use in NAS systems with up to 8 bays
Tested for 24×7 reliability
Built for optimum NAS compatibility
Premium support and a 3-year limited warranty
Small and home office NAS systems in a 24×7 environment
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| Brand | WD |
|---|---|
| Series | Red |
| Model | WD80EFZX |
| Packaging | Bare Drive |
| Interface Interface | SATA 6.0Gb/s |
|---|---|
| Capacity | 8TB |
| RPM RPM | 5400 RPM |
| Cache Cache | 128MB |
| Features | Fill your NAS with WD Red, then fill it with awesome. There’s an industry-leading WD Red drive for every compatible NAS system to help fulfill your data storage needs. With drives up to 10TB, WD Red offers a wide array of solutions for customers looking to build the biggest, best-performing NAS storage solution. Built for single-bay to 8-bay NAS systems, WD Red packs the power to store your precious data in one powerhouse unit. With WD Red, you’re ready for what’s next. Exclusive NASware 3.0 Built for optimum NAS compatibility Desktop drives vs. WD Red |
|---|---|
| Usage | For NAS systems |
| Form Factor Form Factor | 3.5″ |
|---|---|
| Height (maximum) | 1.03″ |
| Width (maximum) | 4.00″ |
| Length (maximum) | 5.79″ |
| Date First Available | April 25, 2022 |
|---|
Pros: -Performance is about what you’d expect for a 5400 RPM drive
-SMART seems to reporting drive state accurately
Cons: -3/8 drives ordered have showed re-allocated sector counts that have been creeping up month-to-month and eventually required replacement
Overall Review: -Installed in a Synology DS1815+ w/ infrequent periods of heavy write activity but mostly just brief read activity during business hours
-Two batches of drives showing failures
* 14 AUG 2016
* 16 JUN 2016
Although you can utilize the Red drive in an external enclosure or as a primary/secondary drive, the WD Red drive is intended to be used in 3rd party NAS enclosure that support RAID, for use with other RED drives in that array.
“Compatibility list for the WD Red NAS Hard Drive”:
http://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=9758
“Testing a drive for problems using Data Lifeguard Diagnostics for Windows”: https://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=940&lang=en
“Warranty policy and online warranty services for WD products”:
https://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=618&lang=en
“How to get an RMA to replace a defective product, or obtain a power supply or USB cable for a WD product”: https://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=8&lang=en
For further feedback with any questions you may have on our product lines, you can contact us below with mention of the following case number.
Support Case Number: 030818-12780469
Need Help? Please contact us at 1 (800) 275-4932
Pros: -They didn’t die yet. Let’s face it, hard drive CAN be a flip of the coin. Great whether on Friday where the factory is, starting the line back on Monday and do wonders for quality. I have now used 9 of these RED drives with no failures. I do admit that I have not done any special testing for speed. All are installed in 2 different Synology NAS units in SHR raid. I will update if anything changes there.
-Decent price in comparable groups. When I am looking at a NAs grade drive, STABILITY is what matters 1st thing; then cost and other issues. I have had no issues but I have also kept the rpms down to help this out. I had the options for using 7200rpm drives, but in NAS units where vibration is already a concern, I did not want to aggravate any potential sore spots.
Cons: -They do chirp a little more than I thought they would but I did review other comments, read up online and noticed this to be reported so no real shock. If you are running DLNA out of a NAS in a cabinet near you and you are full of drives, you might hear it. Not in my case and so I am not crying.
Overall Review: So far my experience is positive; I have had drives from every manufacturer go down but I can honestly say that WD has been by far my best luck. I have seen drives from IBM, Maxtor, Seagate, WD, Hitachi, Toshiba, Fujitsu, NEC and I am sure i forgot some. WD has been the best performer for me.
Pros: I have had 3 running 24 X 7 for about 4 months. No problems. Worked out-of-the-box, with a quick format. Reasonably good price
Cons: None … so far
Overall Review: I’d like the faster pro model, but not at nearly $200 more
Pros: Relatively Quiet
Reliable
Cons: Pricing
Spindle speed (5400RPM, not a huge con)
Overall Review: I had initially purchased Seagate IronWolf 8TB NAS drives but had returned them due to the disks failing after 3 weeks of usage. I decided to give the WD drives a shot and I’m glad I did. They came in a bit more expensive than the Seagate drives that I purchased on sale but I have experienced absolutely ZERO issues with them so far. They’ve been running for about 2 months without a single issue in my Netgear ReadyNAS RN212.
Pros: Ordered half a dozen, all have worked and all were shipped well
Cons: It’s not an enterprise drive
Pros: I bought 4. I ran S.M.A.R.T. Tests on them. None were DOA.
After a few weeks of use inside a QNAP NAS, none of them have had alerts.
Cons: None yet
Pros: WD Reliability
Cons: Default mounting screw holes have changed. On my Fractal Designs R5 case can only use 2 of the 4 mounting grommets (bottom holes used, not side). Still quiet and doesn’t seem to matter.
Overall Review: Expanding a 5TiBx8 drive zfs array to 8TiBx8 drive zfs array. Took 9 days of swapping the drives out one-at-a-time and resilvering. Brutal burn-in process for the drives and they all survived. Array expanded as expected. Been running 24/7 since without issues.
var ccs_cc_args = ccs_cc_args || []; ccs_cc_args.push([‘mf’,’Western Digital’]); ccs_cc_args.push([‘pn’,’WD80EFZX’]); ccs_cc_args.push([‘upcean’, ”]); ccs_cc_args.push([‘lang’, ‘en’]); ccs_cc_args.push([‘market’, ‘US’]); (function () { var o = ccs_cc_args; o.push([‘_SKey’, ‘1b1e8766’]); o.push([‘_ZoneId’, ‘faa3fafd5b’]); var sc = document.createElement(‘script’); sc.type = ‘text/javascript’; sc.async = true; sc.src = (‘https:’ == document.location.protocol ? ‘https://’ : ‘//’) + ‘cdn.cnetcontent.com/jsc/h.js’; var n = document.getElementsByTagName(‘script’)[0]; n.parentNode.insertBefore(sc, n); })();
| Brand | WD |
|---|---|
| Series | Red |
| Model | WD80EFZX |
| Packaging | Bare Drive |
| Interface Interface | SATA 6.0Gb/s |
|---|---|
| Capacity | 8TB |
| RPM RPM | 5400 RPM |
| Cache Cache | 128MB |
| Features | Fill your NAS with WD Red, then fill it with awesome. There’s an industry-leading WD Red drive for every compatible NAS system to help fulfill your data storage needs. With drives up to 10TB, WD Red offers a wide array of solutions for customers looking to build the biggest, best-performing NAS storage solution. Built for single-bay to 8-bay NAS systems, WD Red packs the power to store your precious data in one powerhouse unit. With WD Red, you’re ready for what’s next. Exclusive NASware 3.0 Built for optimum NAS compatibility Desktop drives vs. WD Red |
|---|---|
| Usage | For NAS systems |
| Form Factor Form Factor | 3.5″ |
|---|---|
| Height (maximum) | 1.03″ |
| Width (maximum) | 4.00″ |
| Length (maximum) | 5.79″ |
| Date First Available | April 25, 2022 |
|---|
Pros: Price, power, temperature, size
Cons: None yet
Overall Review: I purchased 6 x 8 TB WD Red drives to replace my current 6 x 3 TB WD Red drives in my FreeNAS server. I’m running the latest version FreeNAS-9.10-STABLE-201606270534 (dd17351). The drives were immediately recognized. I let them idle for a few days and then started to replace one drive at a time in my ZFS RaidZ2. Resilvering is taking 12 hours per drive. I imagine that this is a fairly good/intensive test for each drive as it resilvers. The FreeNAS server is running on an ASRock Rack C2550D4I with the latest BIOS, latest BMC, and latest onboard controller software. I replaced my RAM before starting the upgrades – went from 16 GB of non-ecc DDR3 2133 MHz to 32 GB of ECC DDR3 1600 MHz. Zero issues so far and i’ve replaced 3 drives with the 4th resilvering currently. All 12 drives are plugged in to the motherboard, once the array is replaced and has automatically grown (taking a leap of faith on what FreeNAS says it will do) i’ll disconnect and remove the old 3 TB drives. Power consumption increased 42w total for the additional 6 drives. I imaging resilvering is increasing the power usage a little bit, but i’m very pleased. I build for 3 years, to align with drive warranty, these fit well.
Pros: -Performance is about what you’d expect for a 5400 RPM drive
-SMART seems to reporting drive state accurately
Cons: -3/8 drives ordered have showed re-allocated sector counts that have been creeping up month-to-month and eventually required replacement
Overall Review: -Installed in a Synology DS1815+ w/ infrequent periods of heavy write activity but mostly just brief read activity during business hours
-Two batches of drives showing failures
* 14 AUG 2016
* 16 JUN 2016
Although you can utilize the Red drive in an external enclosure or as a primary/secondary drive, the WD Red drive is intended to be used in 3rd party NAS enclosure that support RAID, for use with other RED drives in that array.
“Compatibility list for the WD Red NAS Hard Drive”:
http://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=9758
“Testing a drive for problems using Data Lifeguard Diagnostics for Windows”: https://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=940&lang=en
“Warranty policy and online warranty services for WD products”:
https://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=618&lang=en
“How to get an RMA to replace a defective product, or obtain a power supply or USB cable for a WD product”: https://support.wdc.com/knowledgebase/answer.aspx?ID=8&lang=en
For further feedback with any questions you may have on our product lines, you can contact us below with mention of the following case number.
Support Case Number: 030818-12780469
Need Help? Please contact us at 1 (800) 275-4932
Pros: -They didn’t die yet. Let’s face it, hard drive CAN be a flip of the coin. Great whether on Friday where the factory is, starting the line back on Monday and do wonders for quality. I have now used 9 of these RED drives with no failures. I do admit that I have not done any special testing for speed. All are installed in 2 different Synology NAS units in SHR raid. I will update if anything changes there.
-Decent price in comparable groups. When I am looking at a NAs grade drive, STABILITY is what matters 1st thing; then cost and other issues. I have had no issues but I have also kept the rpms down to help this out. I had the options for using 7200rpm drives, but in NAS units where vibration is already a concern, I did not want to aggravate any potential sore spots.
Cons: -They do chirp a little more than I thought they would but I did review other comments, read up online and noticed this to be reported so no real shock. If you are running DLNA out of a NAS in a cabinet near you and you are full of drives, you might hear it. Not in my case and so I am not crying.
Overall Review: So far my experience is positive; I have had drives from every manufacturer go down but I can honestly say that WD has been by far my best luck. I have seen drives from IBM, Maxtor, Seagate, WD, Hitachi, Toshiba, Fujitsu, NEC and I am sure i forgot some. WD has been the best performer for me.
Pros: I have had 3 running 24 X 7 for about 4 months. No problems. Worked out-of-the-box, with a quick format. Reasonably good price
Cons: None … so far
Overall Review: I’d like the faster pro model, but not at nearly $200 more
Pros: Relatively Quiet
Reliable
Cons: Pricing
Spindle speed (5400RPM, not a huge con)
Overall Review: I had initially purchased Seagate IronWolf 8TB NAS drives but had returned them due to the disks failing after 3 weeks of usage. I decided to give the WD drives a shot and I’m glad I did. They came in a bit more expensive than the Seagate drives that I purchased on sale but I have experienced absolutely ZERO issues with them so far. They’ve been running for about 2 months without a single issue in my Netgear ReadyNAS RN212.
Pros: Ordered half a dozen, all have worked and all were shipped well
Cons: It’s not an enterprise drive
Pros: I bought 4. I ran S.M.A.R.T. Tests on them. None were DOA.
After a few weeks of use inside a QNAP NAS, none of them have had alerts.
Cons: None yet
Pros: WD Reliability
Cons: Default mounting screw holes have changed. On my Fractal Designs R5 case can only use 2 of the 4 mounting grommets (bottom holes used, not side). Still quiet and doesn’t seem to matter.
Overall Review: Expanding a 5TiBx8 drive zfs array to 8TiBx8 drive zfs array. Took 9 days of swapping the drives out one-at-a-time and resilvering. Brutal burn-in process for the drives and they all survived. Array expanded as expected. Been running 24/7 since without issues.
Pros: Price, power, temperature, size
Cons: None yet
Overall Review: I purchased 6 x 8 TB WD Red drives to replace my current 6 x 3 TB WD Red drives in my FreeNAS server. I’m running the latest version FreeNAS-9.10-STABLE-201606270534 (dd17351). The drives were immediately recognized. I let them idle for a few days and then started to replace one drive at a time in my ZFS RaidZ2. Resilvering is taking 12 hours per drive. I imagine that this is a fairly good/intensive test for each drive as it resilvers. The FreeNAS server is running on an ASRock Rack C2550D4I with the latest BIOS, latest BMC, and latest onboard controller software. I replaced my RAM before starting the upgrades – went from 16 GB of non-ecc DDR3 2133 MHz to 32 GB of ECC DDR3 1600 MHz. Zero issues so far and i’ve replaced 3 drives with the 4th resilvering currently. All 12 drives are plugged in to the motherboard, once the array is replaced and has automatically grown (taking a leap of faith on what FreeNAS says it will do) i’ll disconnect and remove the old 3 TB drives. Power consumption increased 42w total for the additional 6 drives. I imaging resilvering is increasing the power usage a little bit, but i’m very pleased. I build for 3 years, to align with drive warranty, these fit well.