NextPVR Forums
  • ______
  • Home
  • New Posts
  • Wiki
  • Members
  • Help
  • Search
  • Register
  • Login
  • Home
  • Wiki
  • Members
  • Help
  • Search
NextPVR Forums Public Hardware v
« Previous 1 … 11 12 13 14 15 … 263 Next »
Recording HDD advice

 
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
Recording HDD advice
Jaggy
Offline

Posting Freak

Carterton, NZ
Posts: 3,624
Threads: 148
Joined: Mar 2006
#1
2015-09-21, 02:58 AM
It has come around to time to add "yet more" TB's recording space to our NextPVR server but I am WAY out of date (around ten years now) as to the situation with different HDD manufactures reliability etc. let alone which type (Desktop, NAS, Red, Blue, Black etc.) is the best, most reliable & most cost efficient way to go these days?? Some advice & recommendations would be very very much appreciated.
pcostanza
Offline

Posting Freak

Posts: 3,778
Threads: 270
Joined: Oct 2004
#2
2015-09-21, 03:03 AM
I have a few Blue's in my desktops that I record to as well as all Red's in my NAS and they are and have been working well. Plenty enough speed for me to record multiple recordings at one time.


Paul


Custom ASUS Maximus X Hero, 16 GB Memory-ASUS GeForce 1050 Ti, H115i Pro AIO, 850W PS, CM H500P case, Corsair Vengeance RGB Ram, Samsung 970 EVO, HDHomerun Prime & Extend  Tuners- running Windows 10 (and other goodies)
psycik
Offline

Posting Freak

Posts: 5,210
Threads: 424
Joined: Sep 2005
#3
2015-09-21, 03:55 AM
I use drivebender to create one big pool out of any drives I have lying around. Each folder can be set to duplicated meaning a file is on two drives. They're kept as NTFS so you can pull the drive and add it to a different system - the file structure is weird when you do this, but it's doable. Unlike RAID5 ish, where the underlying data may not be usable if the controller dies.

I used to use Green drives, but have started replacing those as needed with RED or NAS drives. But I haven't has any NAS drives for long enough to know if they're any better than green.
Graham
Online

Posting Freak

UK
Posts: 4,058
Threads: 102
Joined: Dec 2005
#4
2015-09-21, 10:12 AM
Jaggy Wrote:different HDD manufactures reliability etc.
I am also well out of touch ... and I was surprised to read in TechRadar ... "Speaking of brands, there are only three hard disk brands around; Seagate/LaCIE/Samsung, Toshiba, Western Digital/HGST."

The load generated by recording and playback is fairly trivial so just about any disk will do ... My experience has been that I can record fifteen shows at once while a playback is in progress without any symptoms of delay ... If I was where you are, I would buy the cheapest.
Jaggy
Offline

Posting Freak

Carterton, NZ
Posts: 3,624
Threads: 148
Joined: Mar 2006
#5
2015-09-21, 10:41 PM
Thanks guys for your comments.....
(I was hoping for a few more responses from others to see if there was a pattern on what's what these days...but oh well)

This is the list of what I have come up with (NZ$) which was why the original question
Code:
Seagate Barracuda ST3000DM001 3TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s (2 Years RTB Warranty)    $169.99 (3)

Western Digital Caviar Green 3TB SATA3 64MB WD30EZRX (ZC)                    $171.35 (In Stock)

Western Digital WD30EFRX 3TB NAS (red) Drive 64MB (ZC)                        $201.25 (In Stock)



Seagate Barracuda Desktop HDD ST4000DM000 4TB 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s OEM            $239.00 (In stock.)

Western Digital WD40EZRX Caviar Green 4TB SATA3 6.0Gb/s 64MB OEM (2 Years RTB Warranty)        $259.00 (4 in stock.)

Western Digital Red WD40EFRX 4TB IntelliPower 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" OEM            $305.00 (In stock.)
ACTCMS
Offline

Posting Freak

UK
Posts: 2,730
Threads: 101
Joined: Jun 2007
#6
2015-09-21, 11:02 PM
For a good few years now, I've been buying Seagate Barracudas - mainly due to price... Smile - but also because they stuck with 7200 RPM...

I've had no problems with them - although I don't have anything over 2TB...

You can go with the brand with the best reputation but it doesn't guarantee that you won't get a duff one...

Alex
psycik
Offline

Posting Freak

Posts: 5,210
Threads: 424
Joined: Sep 2005
#7
2015-09-21, 11:04 PM
I think my last drive was that WD Red 3TB - cos I have a thing about spending more than $200. I have bought a 4tb Green in the past. But I'll slowly go through and replace with Reds as they fail.
mikeh49
Offline

Posting Freak

Posts: 1,129
Threads: 81
Joined: Apr 2005
#8
2015-09-21, 11:05 PM
I have WD Black 500GB and 1TB drives from a few years ago, and have had no problems. In fact, I've never had a drive failure with a WD drive, or the one Seagate I have, for that matter. But, I don't push the envelope on size or early adoption.
HTPC: Optiplex 7010, HDHR Prime/Avermedia Duet A188, NPVR 4.2.5, Win10 Pro
Test:
gEd
Offline

Posting Freak

London
Posts: 3,512
Threads: 100
Joined: Jan 2005
#9
2015-09-21, 11:16 PM
Jaggy Wrote:(I was hoping for a few more responses from others to see if there was a pattern on what's what these days...but oh well). [/code]

You're not going to establish any statistically meaningful "pattern" from the feedback of ~10 people on this forum. Unless you work for an IT shop or distributor that gets to see all the warranty returns, no one can tell you which are the most reliable drives out there (beyond published MTBF).

I've got 2 x Samsung HDs (1TB + 2TB) that have been running flawlessly for 4+ years but there is bound to be someone here who has had a Samsung drive fail on them and thinks that they are the devils spawn.

you need to consider what capacity you need, price and whether power consumption/heat/noise is a factor to you. The best way to ensure longevity is to keep the disks within operating temps so if you have a small case with restricted airflow, definitely consider a lower powered 5400rpm "green" drive. It seems that the speed of disks is a virtual non-issue for tv recordings as others have commented. Typically the largest capacity drives carry the highest premium so unless you desperately need 4+TB, you usually get a better GB/$ ratio of the 2nd or 3rd highest capacity drives (as can be seen from your prices above (or below if like me you have dicked around with your forum settings to show the most recent posts first) ).
“If this is the way Queen Victoria treats her prisoners, she doesn't deserve to have any.”
Jaggy
Offline

Posting Freak

Carterton, NZ
Posts: 3,624
Threads: 148
Joined: Mar 2006
#10
2015-09-22, 01:26 AM
gEd Wrote:You're not going to establish any statistically meaningful "pattern" from the feedback of ~10 people on this forum. Unless you work for an IT shop or distributor that gets to see all the warranty returns, no one can tell you which are the most reliable drives out there (beyond published MTBF).

I was never expecting a hard & fast reliable result.....BUT as we are all doing the same thing with our recording drives if any particular make was failing for not all that old drives it would be nice to know.... waaaaay back in the past when I ran my computer repair business it became very obvious, even with the small number (relative) of PC's I serviced, that Maxtor drives were a thing to avoid at the time.... I do remember a number of years back then I went for one of the "add more TB" server upgrades that Seagate drives were to be avoided at that time (I have always had a good run from Seagate drives over the years) therefore (after a bad experience with an early 1TB WD green that would keep going on a "go slow" & making the NMT re-boot...even though that same drive has been working OK (apart from the slow down) in my using PC for years) I ended up with two 2TB WD Black drives that have been working great, but they were damn expensive at the time...

Quote:I've got 2 x Samsung HDs (1TB + 2TB) that have been running flawlessly for 4+ years but there is bound to be someone here who has had a Samsung drive fail on them and thinks that they are the devils spawn.

Again I never had any real problems with Samsung drives in the past

Quote:you need to consider what capacity you need, price and whether power consumption/heat/noise is a factor to you. The best way to ensure longevity is to keep the disks within operating temps so if you have a small case with restricted airflow, definitely consider a lower powered 5400rpm "green" drive.

Capacity wise I could struggle with a 3TB added to the 6TB that is already there... noise is no factor (refer photo attached of the current server is it has been for years <grin>)

Quote: It seems that the speed of disks is a virtual non-issue for tv recordings as others have commented. Typically the largest capacity drives carry the highest premium so unless you desperately need 4+TB, you usually get a better GB/$ ratio of the 2nd or 3rd highest capacity drives (as can be seen from your prices above (or below if like me you have dicked around with your forum settings to show the most recent posts first) ).

Agree re: high premium for size but the 4TB Seagate is within my price range & should give some years capacity before I need to think about adding more Wink
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »

Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)

Pages (3): 1 2 3 Next »


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Is this reasonable CPU usage for recording without transcode ngeunit1 3 248 2025-04-01, 12:18 AM
Last Post: mvallevand
  Building a Linux box for NextPVR advice please bgowland 21 837 2025-03-27, 10:03 PM
Last Post: bgowland
  Tuner Advice pg33 3 1,494 2022-11-04, 01:36 AM
Last Post: mvallevand
  AMD HTPC Build Advice NumberFive 6 5,442 2021-01-04, 03:14 PM
Last Post: NumberFive
  WD Green for Recording Drive? Lao Pan 3 2,753 2018-03-05, 10:27 AM
Last Post: Lao Pan
  Advice on adequate hardware for new build nthpixel 10 6,821 2017-07-15, 05:02 PM
Last Post: nthpixel
  Sat-IP advice - DVB-T2 and DVB-S2 combinations. elsmandino 37 19,023 2017-04-05, 12:40 PM
Last Post: mvallevand
  Client advice - Put PC in hall cupboard mattyb 13 8,231 2016-01-23, 05:17 AM
Last Post: stustunz
  Still using analog cable, need advice for quality image Flow 24 8,566 2014-03-07, 08:53 PM
Last Post: martint123
  Shaw Satellite and recording from HDMI port SFX Group 2 2,500 2013-11-06, 04:41 AM
Last Post: SFX Group

  • View a Printable Version
  • Subscribe to this thread
Forum Jump:

© Designed by D&D, modified by NextPVR - Powered by MyBB

Linear Mode
Threaded Mode