🚀 Elevate Your Storage Game!
The Western Digital WD RE 2 TB Enterprise Hard Drive is engineered for high-performance and reliability, featuring a 7200 RPM speed, 6 Gb/s transfer rates, and a robust 1.2 million hour MTBF, making it the ideal choice for business-critical applications.
Standing screen display size | 3.5 Inches |
Hard Drive | 2 TB Raid |
National Stock Number | 7025-01-620-0420 |
Brand | Western Digital |
Series | RE |
Item model number | WD2000FYYZ |
Hardware Platform | PC |
Item Weight | 1.66 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 5.8 x 4 x 1 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.8 x 4 x 1 inches |
Color | Silver |
Flash Memory Size | 2 TB |
Hard Drive Interface | Serial ATA-300 |
Hard Drive Rotational Speed | 7200 RPM |
Manufacturer | Western Digital |
Language | English |
ASIN | B0090UFNR6 |
National Stock Number | 7025-01-620-0420 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | August 23, 2012 |
D**K
Great replacement drive
These are a smaller drive that are not in great demand anymore due to there size of 2TB. I am using 12 of these in a Synology rack station and this was a replacement drive. These drives are no louder than any other drives, Western Digital makes a great hard drive now that is reliable, and they stand by their warranty.
R**G
Works great
I must say that I love the packaging this HDD came in that's very securely protected from damage. This drive is new as it was never used that is evident by the packaging. However, it is not recently manufactured though because the manufactured date shows 2015 on the label. Nevertheless, it is still new as it has not been used before.In using it, on the other hand, at first I didn't know or understood loading it in Linux that HDDs over 2TB is not supported in Linux where partitioning is concerned. I am using Linux Mint 19 Cinnamon and it apparently doesn't seem to have support for using drives greater in storage size than 2TB so no GPT partition style support except MBR partition style. So when I saw that the drive was somehow automatically divided into 4 preset partitions that could not be removed, resized or addition ones able to be created I thought that something was wrong with the drive itself. But when I decided to see what would happen when using it in Windows Disk Management Console a prompt came up asking what partition style that I would like to initialize the disk with either MBR or GPT.Not too familiar with the difference or benefits of one vs the other I decided to do a little research on the difference and benefits of using MBR vs GPT partition styles. As it turns out once you are using HDDs with a storage capacity greater than 2TB you must use GPT partition style to initialize the drive and great your partitions. MBR only supports less than 2TB and up to 4 partitions on the drive so that is why when I connected the drive in Linux and it showed only 4 preset partitions and prevented me from editing, deleting or creating additional partitions then I understood what was the problem.It wasn't the drive that was the problem but Linux OS doesn't support GPT except MBR. Whether or not this can be mitigated to switch to GPT to initialize a HDD with storage capacity greater than 2TB is not necessary for me right now. However, once I used Windows to setup the drive with GPT partition style I was able to create the partitions I wanted with no problems and everything now works great now.
S**E
Failed hard at 2yr 10mo
Update Feb 2016 - I received a new RMA replacement drive from WD today. I plan to use it to store downloaded video and other junk - I would not trust it with anything important.Update Jan 2016 - this drive has had a sudden and total failure - it no longer undetectable by any PC. The drive reported no SMART errors and provided no other indication of a pending failure. I was better off with the Green drives, at least they gave an indication of failure and I was able to copy the data to another drive. With this drive my data is gone, gone, gone, never to be seen again. WD lists it as still under warranty so with any luck I'll get it replaced with a similar low quality piece of hardware.-- original review --I purchased 2 WD Green drives thinking they'd be great for my network-attached photo collection which needs to be available but has relatively infrequent read/write activity. Within 2 years both began reporting SMART errors. So 20 months ago I replaced both with these WD RE drives - one 1TB and one 2TB. So far there has not been one issue and now I plan to purchase two more of these drives.It is difficult or impossible to get a true measurement of hard drive reliability. The URE rate is a useful, although non-holistic representation of drive reliability. WD rates their Green and Black drives the same at 10^14, yet Amazon.com review comments suggest Green drives are less reliable than Black. Amazon reviews are some of the best data we have, given due scrutiny. Since WD indicates the reliability of the Black drive is just as bad as that of the Green (WD would have phrased this differently), I decided to steer away from the consumer line all together.This WD RE drive has a URE rate at 10^16, two orders of magnitude better than the Black. At first glance these numbers seem too large to be meaningful, but analysis can be found online using real-world models to illustrate the significant difference of even going up one level of magnitude in URE.
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