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- May 28, 2011
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- 10,996
Well I thought I'd just post this quick blurb on my experience with my new HGST 6TB Drives (Model HDN726060ALE614) running at 7200 RPM.
Note: All the temps are while the NAS is in my computer room (~22C), in the basement it is much cooler so running temps when I relocate the box will be lower.
First of all, my WD Red 2TB drives ran at 28C to 32C 99% of the time, warming up slightly another 2C during a scrub. The fans blowing air across them were running at 7VDC to make the fans nice a quiet. All was good in the world.
So now I've been running these WD Reds for over 5 years and I thought it would be a good time to replace them with four 6TB drives, the model didn't bother me, I just needed to meet my price of $160 each. So the HGST 6TB Deskstar drives running at 7200 RPM sounded good to me. I knew that they would run a little warmer but I had no idea how much that would really be.
So I burned in the drives and used a house fan to keep everything cool (I had my six WD Reds and the four HGST drives connected) as the HGST drives were not mounted anywhere, they just laid next to the case. I eventually created a new pool and copied all the data over. About 4 days ago I reconfigured the case and removed the WD Reds and installed the HGST drives. I let these run for 3 days and then started to monitor the hard drive temps. These drives were running from 39C to 45C. I verified this over a 12 hour period and taking a temperature check every 30 minutes (using a scriopt to email it to me).
Just over an hour ago I reconfigured my cooling fans to run from 12 VDC vice 7 VDC and of course now I can hear the cooling fans run, not loud but it is noticeable in a quiet room. But the temps have dropped to 34C to 40C which is much better.
But now I need to troubleshoot the air flow issue because my drives are stacked on top of each other and here are the temps:
Top: 36C
Upper Middle: 34C
Lower Middle: 40C
Bottom: 37C
I will start by spacing out the drives.
And the quick results are: All drives now 33C to 37C. When the system is placed into the basement they will be cooler. I'm curious what they will do during a scrub. Time to find out.
So running a scrub for ~60 minutes changed the temps to 36C to 39C, not bad at all. I will be playing with the power savings modes to see if I can reduce the temperature without spinning the hard drives down, even if that means parking the heads. At this point in time the heads do not park and I have the APM set to Disable. I'm not hopeful that I will be able to bring the drive temps down any further without using high CFM fans, but I feel I can achieve a reasonable temperature regardless.
But my point about these HGST drives is that they do in fact run much hotter than the WD Red 2TB drives in the exact same environment, up to 13C/23.4F more and that is a lot. I had to reconfigure the hard drive placement and increase the cooling fan speed in order to compensate. If you are a person running 5200/5400 RPM drives and want to move up to 7200 RPM drives, this is your warning.
Also, these HGST drives do have some vibration in them and you can definitely hear the heads moving whereas the WD Reds were nice and quiet. This would only become an issue if you were to use these in a place you wanted absolute silence.
I have not looked at power draw, I know that these pull more power than my Reds but then again I did reduce the drive count by 2, should be close to a wash.
Note: All the temps are while the NAS is in my computer room (~22C), in the basement it is much cooler so running temps when I relocate the box will be lower.
First of all, my WD Red 2TB drives ran at 28C to 32C 99% of the time, warming up slightly another 2C during a scrub. The fans blowing air across them were running at 7VDC to make the fans nice a quiet. All was good in the world.
So now I've been running these WD Reds for over 5 years and I thought it would be a good time to replace them with four 6TB drives, the model didn't bother me, I just needed to meet my price of $160 each. So the HGST 6TB Deskstar drives running at 7200 RPM sounded good to me. I knew that they would run a little warmer but I had no idea how much that would really be.
So I burned in the drives and used a house fan to keep everything cool (I had my six WD Reds and the four HGST drives connected) as the HGST drives were not mounted anywhere, they just laid next to the case. I eventually created a new pool and copied all the data over. About 4 days ago I reconfigured the case and removed the WD Reds and installed the HGST drives. I let these run for 3 days and then started to monitor the hard drive temps. These drives were running from 39C to 45C. I verified this over a 12 hour period and taking a temperature check every 30 minutes (using a scriopt to email it to me).
Just over an hour ago I reconfigured my cooling fans to run from 12 VDC vice 7 VDC and of course now I can hear the cooling fans run, not loud but it is noticeable in a quiet room. But the temps have dropped to 34C to 40C which is much better.
But now I need to troubleshoot the air flow issue because my drives are stacked on top of each other and here are the temps:
Top: 36C
Upper Middle: 34C
Lower Middle: 40C
Bottom: 37C
I will start by spacing out the drives.
And the quick results are: All drives now 33C to 37C. When the system is placed into the basement they will be cooler. I'm curious what they will do during a scrub. Time to find out.
So running a scrub for ~60 minutes changed the temps to 36C to 39C, not bad at all. I will be playing with the power savings modes to see if I can reduce the temperature without spinning the hard drives down, even if that means parking the heads. At this point in time the heads do not park and I have the APM set to Disable. I'm not hopeful that I will be able to bring the drive temps down any further without using high CFM fans, but I feel I can achieve a reasonable temperature regardless.
But my point about these HGST drives is that they do in fact run much hotter than the WD Red 2TB drives in the exact same environment, up to 13C/23.4F more and that is a lot. I had to reconfigure the hard drive placement and increase the cooling fan speed in order to compensate. If you are a person running 5200/5400 RPM drives and want to move up to 7200 RPM drives, this is your warning.
Also, these HGST drives do have some vibration in them and you can definitely hear the heads moving whereas the WD Reds were nice and quiet. This would only become an issue if you were to use these in a place you wanted absolute silence.
I have not looked at power draw, I know that these pull more power than my Reds but then again I did reduce the drive count by 2, should be close to a wash.
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