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🚀 Power your NAS with speed, space, and silence — don’t get left behind!
The Seagate IronWolf 8TB NAS Internal Hard Drive is a 3.5-inch SATA 6Gb/s HDD designed specifically for multi-user NAS environments. Featuring a high 7200 RPM spindle speed, 256MB cache, and optimized for RAID setups, it delivers fast, reliable, and quiet performance. With IronWolf Health Management and a 3-year warranty, it ensures long-term durability and proactive drive monitoring, making it ideal for professional teams demanding robust storage solutions.












| ASIN | B01M1BUBSO |
| Additional Features | Portable |
| Best Sellers Rank | #168 in Internal Hard Drives |
| Brand | Seagate |
| Built-In Media | IronWolf™ 8TB SATA |
| Cache Memory Installed Size | 256 |
| Color | Silver |
| Compatible Devices | pc |
| Connectivity Technology | SATA |
| Customer Package Type | Standard Packaging |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,046 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 750 Gigabits Per Second |
| Digital Storage Capacity | 8 TB |
| EU Spare Part Availability Duration | 3 Years |
| Enclosure Material | Metal |
| Form Factor | 3.5-inch |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00763649098196, 00763649110874, 05415247104544 |
| Hard Disk Description | Hybrid Drive |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 3.5 Inches |
| Hard Disk Interface | Serial ATA |
| Hard Disk Rotational Speed | 7200 RPM |
| Hard-Drive Size | 8 TB |
| Hardware Connectivity | SATA 6.0 Gb/s |
| Hardware Platform | PC; Gaming Console |
| Installation Type | Internal Hard Drive |
| Item Type Name | Seagate 8TB IronWolf NAS SATA 6Gb/s NCQ 256MB Cache 3.5-Inch Internal Hard Drive (ST8000VN0022) |
| Item Weight | 780 Grams |
| Manufacturer | SEAGATE |
| Media Speed | 210 MB/s |
| Mfr Part Number | ST8000VN0022 |
| Model Name | ST8000VN004 |
| Model Number | ST8000VN0022 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Special Feature | Portable |
| Specific Uses For Product | business, personal |
| UPC | 763649098196 763649117965 763649110874 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 3-year limited |
T**N
Seagate IronWolf 8TB NAS HDD - Quiet, Fast, Reliable, and a Good Value when On-Sale.
Pros: - High Capacity. - Quiet compared with other 7200 rpm NAS Drives (HGST). - Seagate Tools provides an excellent suite of testing and drive monitoring software to test drives before Installation. - Read and Write Speed are very Good for a HDD. - 256MB Cache which is 2X the Cache on WD RED or HGST NAS Drives. - 3 Year Warranty. - Drives are HEAVY with a lot of Thermal Mass compared to other NAS Drives. - Low vibration. - Drives run Cool (compared to other similar capacity NAS Drives). - No Drive Failures in 10 months of 24/7 use. Cons: - Cost per Terrabyte is still higher than for IronWolf 4TB NAS Drives. I have 15 of these Seagate IronWolf 8TB NAS drives operating in RAID and non-RAID configurations. Some of the drives have been operationg for 10 months of 24/7 Data Server and Media Server conditions. So far, I have had no failures. I test each drive before installing it in the servers by doing a full format of the disc, doing short and long self tests in Seagate Tools, updating the firmware to the latest versions available, and generally running the drives through the entire gamut of tests in the Seagate Tools menu. The testing suite takes more than 48 hours to complete but, I would rather spend the time up front to ensure the drives are not going to fail from infant mortality and there are no bad portions of the drives before spending more than 24 hours to load data unto the drive and have it fail. So far, I am very satisfied with these Seagate IronWolf Drives compared to NAS Drives from HGST and WD. The HGST drives are noisy and I am concerned that there will be head crashes. After having the same problem with 8 of these drives, I realized that it was just a characteristic of the HGST drives. I still don't like it. The WD Red 8TB NAS drives are slower to read and write and are loud compared to the IronWolf drives. I also prefer the Seagate Tools maintenance suite over the one for WD. I watch for the sales on the IronWolf NAS drives and save 20% on the price. This adds up when ordering multiple drives. Other Comments: I have started buying the IronWolf 10TB drives. The outer case must be made from Magnesium or the drive spindles and platters must be made from some ultra-light material and different design. The 10TB drives are quite a bit lighter than the 8TB drives with the same outer dimensions. The 10TB drives are also quiet and low vibration. So far, after 3 months, the 10TB drives are performing good also. I recommend the Seagate IronWolf NAS Drives. Disclaimer: I have no relationship with Seagate or any other drive manufacturer. Every one of the drives I own have been purchased with my own money I have no incentive to give a good review other than the fact that I like the product and it performs to my expectations.
S**S
Good drives so far
I bought a couple of these as well as some WD Reds and HGST Deskstars and ended up keeping these and the Reds and returning the Deskstars which, along with the Reds, were slower and noisier. Both make a regular clicking sound, but are otherwise quiet, quieter than the Ironwolf's in fact, though barely (the main noise the IronWolfs make is spinning up, where they're a bit louder). As far as I can tell, the clicking is normal, though WD/HGST (same company) can't seem to make up their minds, as one person that contacted them about it was told it's normal and another was told it's not. It seems to be due to the drive redistributing lubricant every few seconds, in an attempt to increase longevity, but considering I've never had an issue with that, I wasn't willing to put up with that noise for a possible increased lifespan (though possibly not), with no ability to even adjust its frequency, especially for the cost. I kept the Reds though, because they were much cheaper than either of the others, so for that price, I was willing to deal with it. Also, the Deskstars were slow, performing similarly to the Reds, despite being 7200RPM. Had it not been for the clicking (and possibly even despite the clicking), I would have considered returning the Seagates as well, simply due to the Reds being so much cheaper, but I decided to keep them because they are a good bit faster, and so I used them to replace my main data drives to give a bit of a speed boost there, not to mention more capacity. Interestingly, the Reds don't seem to click any more, so maybe it's something that goes away after a little while. Still, the Deskstars weren't worth the extra price, even if the clicking did subside. To sum up, if you want the best bang for your buck regardless of speed or noise, the Reds are the better choice (and even with the clicking it may not be audible from a few feet away, and it may go away). If you want speed, the IronWolfs are better. Of course, even a very slow SSD would still be much faster, but you're going to be much more limited on capacity and it's going to cost a lot more, so it really just depends on what you're going for. For my setup, paying a bit more for the IronWolfs for the extra speed for just the two drives I use for my main data was worth it, whereas my other drives don't need that and so I'm much more happy saving money and using Reds. (NB: I got my Reds through Best Buy as external drives and shelled them to use them internally. If you're not comfortable doing that, and just want to buy an internal drive, the Seagates are definitely the better buy, as they're cheaper and faster and don't click. While it's not a direct comparison, and therefore these drives aren't really in direct competition with the Best Buy Reds, they effectively are, and so it would be nice to see the pricing come down some to reflect that.) Another thing I want to mention is that many people are very anti-Seagate (some might call them WD fanboys), claiming they aren't reliable. Unfortunately, many of these people are basing these claims on the old BackBlaze test, which has been shown to be a poor source of reliability information due to the vast difference in environment between how those drives were tested and how drives are used in a home computer and, more importantly, because the poor reliability of the Seagate drives was due to the 3TB drives, which were very problematic, and not only for Seagate. And, of course, others are basing their claims on what others have said or because they had one Seagate drive fail, and they believe that means all Seagates are bad. Personally, I've used numerous Seagates (probably 20+) over the course of several years, and not one has failed. I've also done extensive research and digging into the BackBlaze and other data, and Seagate and WD are pretty much even, with HGST being slightly better (though I'm not sure if the difference is statistically significant). So I will buy either, depending on the value and performance, and don't worry much about the reliability difference between them. I just do extensive testing on each drive when it's new (I run it through a series of different hard drive tests: HGST DFT, WDDLG, Seagate SeaTools, and EaseUS Partition Master). This obviously takes a few days, but if a drive handles all that without issue, I can be fairly certain it's not gong to fail anytime soon, and typically drives either fail within a few weeks or last for years (bathtub curve). I also keep everything backed up, so a failure might cause some data loss, and will be a bit of a pain, but it won't be a disaster.
J**N
Great drive for NAS
I have six of these in my NAS, and it runs 24/7. The reliability is outstanding. Over the course of 7 1/2 years I only had 1 drive fail on me, and that was after running continually for 7 years. To only have 1 failure after 65,000 hours of continual use is pretty amazing. Since I was running RAID, not a single byte of data was lost. At the rate we tend to upgrade technology, it is wonderful to know these drives and the QNAP NAS still exceeds my expectations today.
R**2
I wanted these to be great - but they sucked so, so badly
I bought 4 of these for a NAS device. Worked fine at first, then gradually began running warmer and warmer. The drives are specifically labelled as NAS drives and came with a 3-year warranty. At 3 years and 10 months all 4 drives began throwing SMART errors of "Pre-Fail" and "Old_age". Dismal read / write times and rapidly growing bad sector counts. I've been around long enough to know that Pre-fail and Old_age don't necessarily mean much, but the high, and increasingly higher temps along with growing bad sector counts definitely do. When I first installed them, these drives had great performance, low temps, and great SMART stats. So much so, that I added a 5th Seagate NAS drive later on. Now, even that one has failed after only a few months (I'll warranty it out, but I honestly won't be comfortable using the replacement). So many reviewers speak highly of Seagate drives, but after 20 years of buying drives from WD, Seagate, and yes, even some others, I can honestly say that I would probably never buy another Seagate drive. None of these 4 Seagate drives were even close to their MTBF limits. There's simply no legitimate reason for the failures except that quality control sucks and Seagate is shipping poorer quality products than ever before. Too bad. Was once a really great company with really excellent products. When you spend almost a thousand dollars on hard drives, I believe you have every right to voice your upset when they all fail shortly after the warranty expires. So.... here it is.
R**A
Drive might be great, but already disappointed with mounting.
I bought 4 of these for my Synology NAS. I usually buy WD Red, but Seagate recently started advertising this drive with advanced Synology NAS compatibility. This might seem petty for a 1 star review, but it is more of a public service announcement. This drive does not have the middle mounting screw hole. My Synology NAS and apparently all created before June 2014 - the black plastic retaining clip needs the middle hole or it does not fit. I fail to see why a company would manufacture a drive and not put a standard mounting hole in it. It is a screw hole, does it really cost anything to manufacture it? I did contact Synology and was told I could just snip the middle peg off the retaining clip. The drive still fits kind of awkwardly in the drawer, I have had 4 different model drives and 5 replacement upgrades before this one and never did one seem stuffed in here so tight. One might say my frustration should be taken up with Synology - but really - you want to claim this amazing partnership and compatibility, you should probably test your drive with some older models of NAS. Beyond that, it is a screw hole that all drives since they invented 3.5 hard disks have had - your risk creating problems for any customer that needed it for mounting by leaving it out. Beware this might be a problem if you are using this drive in a standard case where the manufacturer expects you have this mounting point. Edit: 3/6/2017 - I purchased 7 of these drives now. They all were fine, no DOA, no problem in my NAS. The new Synology DSM actually recognizes them as different and I hope somehow makes use of better SMART information in predictive failure. Time will tell, but I am upgrading this rating for 4 stars now that I hope Seagate has seen my frustration regarding the location and absence of mounting holes.
G**C
Really solid HHD (8TB, 7200 RPM version)
This is a great drive. I've read reviews that talk about them being noisy - maybe that's the enclosure they're using. They're quieter than my OWC enclosed Seagate 1.5TB Barricudas, and quieter than the turd of an external drive I bought from Western Digital. Came through as new - I couldn't use Seagate Tools to check it, maybe because I can only run Windows 7 in Parallels (I'm mainly a Mac person), but when I registered it for warranty, I got almost a year - not sure what that means. So far, very rapid read/write speeds, and easy booting each time I drop it into the bay. I plan on building a NAS, and this will definitely be a part of that. Fast service, good packaging - straight up solid drive for a good price per TB ratio.
S**Y
Good Plex Server Drive
I ran out of space on my Plex server's old 4TB HGST 7200rpm Desktop NAS drive, so I had to upgrade. This drive "feels" quicker than the HGST it replaced, but I have not done any real testing. I was surprised to find out that the screw holes did not line up with the holes in my case, but luckily this isn't an issue for me due to the way the drive is positioned in the case. The drive is working well for my always-on Plex server, no complaints.
J**N
Perfect for NAS
Went with a total of four of these drives for a QNAP 453b NAS I was building. The drives are quite fast considering and the capacity is excellent. (I decided against 10gb drives due to the cost being almost $80 more per drive.) In the NAS enclosure which is located on a shelf directly behind my my seating location, the drives do have some typical clatter, especially considering the 4 of them run together in RAID, but the enclosure itself is a plastic housing which does not reduce the noise much either. The noise level itself isn't unbearable in any way as I'm generally listening to music while I work. For anyone doing recording (vloggers, etc), I would recommend the drives be in a more sound proof enclosure or located somewhere away from the recording location to avoid picking up any background sound. Otherwise great warranty and read/write speeds. All four worked perfectly out of the box. Remember to register the drives with Seagate. (write down or photograph the drives SN before installing)
P**E
Trop de bruit
Disque parfait si seulement le bruit était plus faible. On entend un faible bruit au niveau des disques c’est vraiment dommage. Cela ne gène pas pendant la journée, c’est surtout le soir qu’on l’entend lorsqu’il y a moins de bruit ambiant. Je pense les remplacer pour des SSD quand cela coutera moins chers car pour le moment ce n’est pas cas. Je recommande tout de même, peut être que je suis tomber sur une mauvaise série à voir avec le temps si les disque tomberont en pannes ou non. Pour cela j’ai pris une assurance. Bon courage
S**.
They work - what more can you ask if a disk drive
Well you could want them to work for a long time but so far these have been working fine in my NAS box. They were the best combination of size/price for a 2 bay NAS device since your only choice for RAID is mirroring. If you've purchased a 4 bay or higher NAS box consider 4G drives unless you need the capacity that 8G drivers will offer.
F**O
Excelente calidad a un precio asequible
Gracias a una oferta de Amazon pude adquirir este disco duro de grandes prestaciones a un precio inferior al del Seagate Archive, modelo del que también adquirí un disco hace un par de años. El Iron Wolf es mucho más rápido a la hora de transferir archivos y, pese a su mayor velocidad de giro, no hace nada de ruido. Tampoco presenta los chasquidos característicos del Seagate Archive. Por ahora creo que ha sido una compra excelente aunque no empezó con buenos augurios porque el transportista perdió un primer disco. Afortunadamente, Amazon me reintegró el importe por lo que pude comprar un segundo disco que esta vez sí llegó en la fecha pactada.
W**E
Good
To replace my really old seagate barracuda. Fast delivery, works as intended
A**R
Recomendo o vendedor e o produto !
Produto original entregue no prazo ! Fiz uma otima compra !
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