Posted July 03, 2018
So I am thinking of buying two of these 8TB HDDs for archival purposes, putting them on an external USB stand that I have for 3.5" (and 2.5") SATA-drives.
https://www.gigantti.fi/product/tietokoneet/kiintolevyt-ssd-ja-verkkotallennus-nas/ST8000VN0022/seagate-ironwolf-3-5-sisainen-nas-kiintolevy-8-tb
(Two, because I am going to make them 1:1 identical copies of each other, so it is not like I need 16TB of total space for backups. 8 TB is fine, for now anyway. :))
1. The description says they are NAS-drives. What does that mean in practice? I am not going to use them in a NAS-setup but just connect them to my laptop through USB, are they fully suitable for that? Could they even be fully used as internal SATA HDDs on a desktop system, if needed? Meaning they have the performance what you'd expect from an internal HDD?
I mainly ask that because I recall in the past reading some user reviews for some bigger HDDs (>2TB) that they use some kind of data interleaving(?) method to increase the amount of data that can be fit into the HDD, but that also makes the HDD severely slow down in certain cases. Somehow I recall that might be a problem for me, e.g. if I'd try to uncompress and compress big files directly on those external HDDs (e.g. if I don't have enough room for those operations on internal hard drives, or just don't feel like copying files back and forth just for simple things like that).
Is that "data interleaving" still used, or an issue at all? Googling for it, I may have used the wrong term and it wasn't about interleaving, which apparently was some old method used on very old and early HDDs. I think I have asked about this before...
2. Do those very big HDDs (like 8TB) work fine on USB HDD stands, or are there some limitations I should know about? Currently I have 2x 3TB HDDs on such a stand, so should the 8TB HDDs work just as fine? I have this USB HDD stand:
https://www.verkkokauppa.com/fi/product/48273/dfdvn/Fuj-tech-Clone-Dock-USB-3-0-telakka-kahdelle-2-5-3-5-SATA-ki
https://www.gigantti.fi/product/tietokoneet/kiintolevyt-ssd-ja-verkkotallennus-nas/ST8000VN0022/seagate-ironwolf-3-5-sisainen-nas-kiintolevy-8-tb
(Two, because I am going to make them 1:1 identical copies of each other, so it is not like I need 16TB of total space for backups. 8 TB is fine, for now anyway. :))
1. The description says they are NAS-drives. What does that mean in practice? I am not going to use them in a NAS-setup but just connect them to my laptop through USB, are they fully suitable for that? Could they even be fully used as internal SATA HDDs on a desktop system, if needed? Meaning they have the performance what you'd expect from an internal HDD?
I mainly ask that because I recall in the past reading some user reviews for some bigger HDDs (>2TB) that they use some kind of data interleaving(?) method to increase the amount of data that can be fit into the HDD, but that also makes the HDD severely slow down in certain cases. Somehow I recall that might be a problem for me, e.g. if I'd try to uncompress and compress big files directly on those external HDDs (e.g. if I don't have enough room for those operations on internal hard drives, or just don't feel like copying files back and forth just for simple things like that).
Is that "data interleaving" still used, or an issue at all? Googling for it, I may have used the wrong term and it wasn't about interleaving, which apparently was some old method used on very old and early HDDs. I think I have asked about this before...
2. Do those very big HDDs (like 8TB) work fine on USB HDD stands, or are there some limitations I should know about? Currently I have 2x 3TB HDDs on such a stand, so should the 8TB HDDs work just as fine? I have this USB HDD stand:
https://www.verkkokauppa.com/fi/product/48273/dfdvn/Fuj-tech-Clone-Dock-USB-3-0-telakka-kahdelle-2-5-3-5-SATA-ki
Post edited July 03, 2018 by timppu
This question / problem has been solved by kbnrylaec