• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Western Digital Celebrates 20 Years of My Passport with a Special Edition

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,230 (7.55/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
Since its introduction in 2004, millions around the world have trusted WD My Passport drives to store and back up their lives' most precious memories and valuable data. To commemorate this milestone anniversary of its most popular drive, Western Digital Corp. is launching the WD My Passport Ultra, 20th Emerald Anniversary Edition. Over the lifetime of the My Passport drives, Western Digital has provided approximately 180 exabytes of data storage for users worldwide, equivalent to up to 18 billion hours of HD video, up to 46 trillion photos, or up to 35 trillion songs.

Prior to the initial introduction of the WD My Passport drive, users had limited options when it came to taking important files with them on the go, having to sacrifice a power outlet and downtime to add and transfer data. In 2004, My Passport delivered a streamlined solution: portable products that offered an impressive amount of storage for many types of digital files - including videos, music, photos, and documents. What started as a simple solution with 40 GB capacity has increased by up to 150 times to now having the world's highest capacity 2.5" portable hard drive with 6 TB of storage, meeting the needs of the modern digital consumer.



"With 20 years, dozens of industrial designs, and approximately 130 million My Passport drives sold, Western Digital is proud to honor this important milestone for one of our most popular product lines, and more importantly, to celebrate the significance of its innovation and how it has positively impacted the lives of consumers around the globe," said Ravi Pendekanti, Senior Vice President of Product Management and Marketing at Western Digital. "We are carrying forward the legacy of reliable performance with the addition of the My Passport Ultra, 20th Emerald Anniversary Edition and look forward to continuing to help people keep backing up the content that matters most in their lives for decades to come."

Featuring a beautiful emerald color finish that traditionally signifies loyalty, peace, and security, the 20th Emerald Anniversary Edition drive continues the trusted legacy of reliability and durability, helping keep special moments safe. Key features include:
  • Sleek Design - Enclosed with anodized metal in a commemorative bold emerald finish, the My Passport Ultra portable hard drive offers added durability and protection to take content on the go with confidence.
  • Seamless Compatibility - Ready to use out of the box and universally compatible with Windows PC, Mac, mobile phones, tablets, and other USB-C devices.
  • Expansive Capacity - Vast storage possibilities with up to 6 TB capacity, providing plenty of space to store photos, videos, music, important documents and more.
  • Enhanced Software - Smarter backups with included Acronis True Image for Western Digital device management software that also helps defend against ransomware.
  • Password Protection - Password protection and 256-bit AES hardware encryption to help safeguard important files.
Featuring a three-year limited warranty, the 2 TB (U.S. MSRP $89.99) and the 6 TB (U.S. MSRP $199.99) My Passport Ultra, 20th Emerald Anniversary Edition drives are available now for purchase at the Western Digital Store and authorized Western Digital retailers, e-tailers, and distributors.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Joined
Oct 19, 2007
Messages
8,257 (1.32/day)
Processor Intel i9 9900K @5GHz w/ Corsair H150i Pro CPU AiO w/Corsair HD120 RBG fan
Motherboard Asus Z390 Maximus XI Code
Cooling 6x120mm Corsair HD120 RBG fans
Memory Corsair Vengeance RBG 2x8GB 3600MHz
Video Card(s) Asus RTX 3080Ti STRIX OC
Storage Samsung 970 EVO Plus 500GB , 970 EVO 1TB, Samsung 850 EVO 1TB SSD, 10TB Synology DS1621+ RAID5
Display(s) Corsair Xeneon 32" 32UHD144 4K
Case Corsair 570x RBG Tempered Glass
Audio Device(s) Onboard / Corsair Virtuoso XT Wireless RGB
Power Supply Corsair HX850w Platinum Series
Mouse Logitech G604s
Keyboard Corsair K70 Rapidfire
Software Windows 11 x64 Professional
Benchmark Scores Firestrike - 23520 Heaven - 3670
6TB for $200? Sounds like a good deal to me.
 
Joined
Jul 30, 2019
Messages
3,276 (1.69/day)
System Name Still not a thread ripper but pretty good.
Processor Ryzen 9 7950x, Thermal Grizzly AM5 Offset Mounting Kit, Thermal Grizzly Extreme Paste
Motherboard ASRock B650 LiveMixer (BIOS/UEFI version P3.08, AGESA 1.2.0.2)
Cooling EK-Quantum Velocity, EK-Quantum Reflection PC-O11, D5 PWM, EK-CoolStream PE 360, XSPC TX360
Memory Micron DDR5-5600 ECC Unbuffered Memory (2 sticks, 64GB, MTC20C2085S1EC56BD1) + JONSBO NF-1
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon RX 5700 & EK-Quantum Vector Radeon RX 5700 +XT & Backplate
Storage Samsung 4TB 980 PRO, 2 x Optane 905p 1.5TB (striped), AMD Radeon RAMDisk
Display(s) 2 x 4K LG 27UL600-W (and HUANUO Dual Monitor Mount)
Case Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic Black (original model)
Audio Device(s) Corsair Commander Pro for Fans, RGB, & Temp Sensors (x4)
Power Supply Corsair RM750x
Mouse Logitech M575
Keyboard Corsair Strafe RGB MK.2
Software Windows 10 Professional (64bit)
Benchmark Scores RIP Ryzen 9 5950x, ASRock X570 Taichi (v1.06), 128GB Micron DDR4-3200 ECC UDIMM (18ASF4G72AZ-3G2F1)
Oof I just bought a My Book 8TB. I would have liked to gotten this 6TB instead. Honestly I wouldn't mind a double height 2.5in portable HDD for higher capacity or something like a My Passport Duo in 2.5in form factor.
 
Joined
Sep 13, 2022
Messages
215 (0.27/day)
I'm looking at Amazon prices for 5-6TB WD My Passport/Elements.

1729171088339.png

All I can see is "Ultra" adds $20 to the price (see this for the differences) and going from 5tb to 6tb adds $55 to the price.
At $200 for 6tb you're better off buying two 5tb drives.
 
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
935 (0.46/day)
Location
The New England region of the United States
System Name Gaming Rig
Processor Ryzen 7 3800X
Motherboard Gigabyte X570 Aurus Pro Wifi
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 chromax.black
Memory 32GB(2x16GB) Patriot Viper DDR4-3200C16
Video Card(s) EVGA RTX 3060 Ti
Storage Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB (Boot/OS)|Hynix Platinum P41 2TB (Games)
Display(s) Gigabyte G27F
Case Corsair Graphite 600T w/mesh side
Audio Device(s) Logitech Z625 2.1 | cheapo gaming headset when mic is needed
Power Supply Corsair HX850i
Mouse Redragon M808-KS Storm Pro (Great Value)
Keyboard Redragon K512 Shiva replaced a Corsair K70 Lux - Blue on Black
VR HMD Nope
Software Windows 11 Pro x64
Benchmark Scores Nope
I'm looking at Amazon prices for 5-6TB WD My Passport/Elements.

View attachment 367950
All I can see is "Ultra" adds $20 to the price (see this for the differences) and going from 5tb to 6tb adds $55 to the price.
At $200 for 6tb you're better off buying two 5tb drives.
The 2TB is even more silly. You can get a cheapo 2TB M.2 drive for literally a few bucks more. Or even better, spend $20 more and get something like a Kingston NV2. Sure, different storage segment, but I just don't see the value. WD used to be able to charge more because they made better drives for the most part. Since their SMR NAS drive shenanigans, can you really trust them?
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,265 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
"Celebrates"?

As someone who has supported well over 3000 staff since the "My Passport" line was realeased by WD, I don't think I've ever encountered a more failure-prone model of external drive. I think I've probably sent 25+ WD Passport drives to data recovery labs at this point and on multiple occasions I've been amazed at how young the drives that failed were. I've also shucked many an external drive myself and the amount of shingles (SAMR) I've caught, or the audacity of finding the first non-SATA drives that have the SATA-to-usb adapter integrated into the HDD's PCB, so you can't even attempt software recovery on an unresponsive drive.... it's truly an /SMH moment.

Did they sell in large volumes? Sure. Cheap shit always outsells higher-quality product. I guess if they're celebrating the sales success at offloading reject drives on consumers for 20 years, then they certainly are justfied in doing that. IME the drives that failed the most in the last decade were the WD "white" drives that didn't make the cut to even be sold as a WD Green drive.

I will sing praises of WD's SSDs all day long but their mechanical hard drive lineage is statistically abysmal from my (relatively huge) sample size.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,265 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Joined
Sep 13, 2022
Messages
215 (0.27/day)
They're the same thing, as of 2016.

They released quite a few SSD products under WD branding but AFAIK those where just rebranded SanDisk tech.

Also:

EDIT:

I like how Tom's Hardware put it:
Western Digital gets hard drives, SanDisk gets flash.
Except it was always that way regardless of the WD label on some SSDs.
 
Joined
Jan 3, 2021
Messages
3,482 (2.46/day)
Location
Slovenia
Processor i5-6600K
Motherboard Asus Z170A
Cooling some cheap Cooler Master Hyper 103 or similar
Memory 16GB DDR4-2400
Video Card(s) IGP
Storage Samsung 850 EVO 250GB
Display(s) 2x Oldell 24" 1920x1200
Case Bitfenix Nova white windowless non-mesh
Audio Device(s) E-mu 1212m PCI
Power Supply Seasonic G-360
Mouse Logitech Marble trackball, never had a mouse
Keyboard Key Tronic KT2000, no Win key because 1994
Software Oldwin
I have a 500 GB My Passport from 2009 and it's still one of my backup drives. 3000 power-on hours, and CDI says "caution" because current pending sector count has climbed to 2, which means that maybe it won't last forever.
 

phil6891

New Member
Joined
Feb 17, 2024
Messages
7 (0.03/day)
A new NAS series wouldn't go a miss WD. Something to replace your aging 2016 line up.
 
Joined
Jul 30, 2019
Messages
3,276 (1.69/day)
System Name Still not a thread ripper but pretty good.
Processor Ryzen 9 7950x, Thermal Grizzly AM5 Offset Mounting Kit, Thermal Grizzly Extreme Paste
Motherboard ASRock B650 LiveMixer (BIOS/UEFI version P3.08, AGESA 1.2.0.2)
Cooling EK-Quantum Velocity, EK-Quantum Reflection PC-O11, D5 PWM, EK-CoolStream PE 360, XSPC TX360
Memory Micron DDR5-5600 ECC Unbuffered Memory (2 sticks, 64GB, MTC20C2085S1EC56BD1) + JONSBO NF-1
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon RX 5700 & EK-Quantum Vector Radeon RX 5700 +XT & Backplate
Storage Samsung 4TB 980 PRO, 2 x Optane 905p 1.5TB (striped), AMD Radeon RAMDisk
Display(s) 2 x 4K LG 27UL600-W (and HUANUO Dual Monitor Mount)
Case Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic Black (original model)
Audio Device(s) Corsair Commander Pro for Fans, RGB, & Temp Sensors (x4)
Power Supply Corsair RM750x
Mouse Logitech M575
Keyboard Corsair Strafe RGB MK.2
Software Windows 10 Professional (64bit)
Benchmark Scores RIP Ryzen 9 5950x, ASRock X570 Taichi (v1.06), 128GB Micron DDR4-3200 ECC UDIMM (18ASF4G72AZ-3G2F1)
"Celebrates"?

As someone who has supported well over 3000 staff since the "My Passport" line was realeased by WD, I don't think I've ever encountered a more failure-prone model of external drive. I think I've probably sent 25+ WD Passport drives to data recovery labs at this point and on multiple occasions I've been amazed at how young the drives that failed were. I've also shucked many an external drive myself and the amount of shingles (SAMR) I've caught, or the audacity of finding the first non-SATA drives that have the SATA-to-usb adapter integrated into the HDD's PCB, so you can't even attempt software recovery on an unresponsive drive.... it's truly an /SMH moment.

Did they sell in large volumes? Sure. Cheap shit always outsells higher-quality product. I guess if they're celebrating the sales success at offloading reject drives on consumers for 20 years, then they certainly are justfied in doing that. IME the drives that failed the most in the last decade were the WD "white" drives that didn't make the cut to even be sold as a WD Green drive.

I will sing praises of WD's SSDs all day long but their mechanical hard drive lineage is statistically abysmal from my (relatively huge) sample size.
What kind of failures occurred and how old were the drives? I've been using 2 x 4TB My Passport drives for backups for about 5 years now without much issue. I'm about forced to upgrade them to larger 8TB drives soon and was curious if those passport drives were standard 2.5in ones internally or those like you describe with the USB integrated into the PCB?
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,265 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
What kind of failures occurred and how old were the drives? I've been using 2 x 4TB My Passport drives for backups for about 5 years now without much issue. I'm about forced to upgrade them to larger 8TB drives soon and was curious if those passport drives were standard 2.5in ones internally or those like you describe with the USB integrated into the PCB?
Usually ticking/clicking drives that spin up but don't register as a drive, so head-crash/unreadable sector issues.

I suspect most of the 2.5" models were damaged by being dropped or knocked, despite the protestations of their owners - but a good majority of the 3.5" models I investigated were storage that lived on a desk 24/7 and wouldn't have been subjected to any knocks or impacts. I can't speak definitively, but my guess/suspicion is that WD White drives used in consumer external hard drive enclosures were rough-running drives with imbalanced platters or rough bearings that were rejected internally at WD for sale as retail drive with a 3+ year warranty but still technically worked long enough to sell with a 1 or 2-year warranty as an external drive. Many of the drives I referred to recovery labs were WD Whites.

It's been a good decade since I last bothered but in the 1-2TB era, I shucked plenty of WD My Passport drives and received the usual lottery results of mostly WD Green, with the occasional Blue or Red, but I stopped shucking drives once I realised WD were just dumping Whites in their 3.5" external drives. Once SAMR hit the market, almost all external drives came infected with shingles.
 
Joined
Jun 10, 2014
Messages
2,985 (0.78/day)
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 5900X ||| Intel Core i7-3930K
Motherboard ASUS ProArt B550-CREATOR ||| Asus P9X79 WS
Cooling Noctua NH-U14S ||| Be Quiet Pure Rock
Memory Crucial 2 x 16 GB 3200 MHz ||| Corsair 8 x 8 GB 1333 MHz
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 1060 3GB ||| MSI GTX 680 4GB
Storage Samsung 970 PRO 512 GB + 1 TB ||| Intel 545s 512 GB + 256 GB
Display(s) Asus ROG Swift PG278QR 27" ||| Eizo EV2416W 24"
Case Fractal Design Define 7 XL x 2
Audio Device(s) Cambridge Audio DacMagic Plus
Power Supply Seasonic Focus PX-850 x 2
Mouse Razer Abyssus
Keyboard CM Storm QuickFire XT
Software Ubuntu
With all these gimmicky features and software, how about creating a solid product with SMART support and reporting to the OS when sectors are bad?
I have a number of these, and they'll happily serve totally corrupted data without any indication of error. (thankfully these were only backups, so I haven't lost anything)

I've started to move away from these external drives, although they are cheap, they are super unreliable. I finally managed to find one external case which supports SMART, and I stuck a WD Gold in there.

I don't think I've ever encountered a more failure-prone model of external drive. I think I've probably sent 25+ WD Passport drives to data recovery labs at this point and on multiple occasions I've been amazed at how young the drives that failed were.
I think one of mine failed when it was less than 2 years old, but I didn't RMA it since I couldn't wipe it. After I got a new computer I accidentally connected the wrong one and apparently it works sometimes, but only on one computer. Absolutely quality stuff!
I think only one of mine hasn't failed (yet) in one way or another, or rather I don't know because I cant find it...

IME the drives that failed the most in the last decade were the WD "white" drives that didn't make the cut to even be sold as a WD Green drive.
It makes me cringe whenever I see videos about building file servers/NAS with shucked WD white drives…
WD Gold only costs a few percent more, plus you can RMA those and you probably will struggle with returning shucked ones.

I will sing praises of WD's SSDs all day long but their mechanical hard drive lineage is statistically abysmal from my (relatively huge) sample size.
Their Gold and Ultrastar series are the most reliable HDDs on the market, and the Black series aren't bad either, too bad they basically abandoned that one.

The 2TB is even more silly. You can get a cheapo 2TB M.2 drive for literally a few bucks more.
There's an old saying using the right tool for the job
Quality HDDs are much more suited for long-term storage and far less prone to data rot than flash, and flash needs to be powered on regularly to prevent data loss. Most HDDs will work 10+ years.
I wouldn't even touch cheap low quality SSDs, you're just asking for data loss then.

But regardless of how you backup your data, I suggest having a way to create checksums of files. There is not much use in having multiple copies if you can't know for sure which files are intact.
 
Joined
Sep 13, 2022
Messages
215 (0.27/day)
But regardless of how you backup your data, I suggest having a way to create checksums of files. There is not much use in having multiple copies if you can't know for sure which files are intact.

That is a point a lot of people miss nowadays, probably because both filesystems and backup software/platforms have improved a lot over the years.
 
Joined
Apr 18, 2019
Messages
935 (0.46/day)
Location
The New England region of the United States
System Name Gaming Rig
Processor Ryzen 7 3800X
Motherboard Gigabyte X570 Aurus Pro Wifi
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 chromax.black
Memory 32GB(2x16GB) Patriot Viper DDR4-3200C16
Video Card(s) EVGA RTX 3060 Ti
Storage Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB (Boot/OS)|Hynix Platinum P41 2TB (Games)
Display(s) Gigabyte G27F
Case Corsair Graphite 600T w/mesh side
Audio Device(s) Logitech Z625 2.1 | cheapo gaming headset when mic is needed
Power Supply Corsair HX850i
Mouse Redragon M808-KS Storm Pro (Great Value)
Keyboard Redragon K512 Shiva replaced a Corsair K70 Lux - Blue on Black
VR HMD Nope
Software Windows 11 Pro x64
Benchmark Scores Nope
There's an old saying using the right tool for the job
Quality HDDs are much more suited for long-term storage and far less prone to data rot than flash, and flash needs to be powered on regularly to prevent data loss. Most HDDs will work 10+ years.
I wouldn't even touch cheap low quality SSDs, you're just asking for data loss then.

But regardless of how you backup your data, I suggest having a way to create checksums of files. There is not much use in having multiple copies if you can't know for sure which files are intact.
That's literally why I said: "Sure, different storage segment, but I just don't see the value." Tom me, HDDs are really only useful for long term backup storage now. I even run my backups from SSD to SSD. Then I copy it out to my NAS and that gets backed up to a standalone HDD. Really important files are also encrypted and copied to online storage.
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,265 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
WD Gold are good quality drives, IIRC they're just the same line as the equivalent Black but with a longer warranty.
Ultrastar are still just Hitachi in all but name; Different tech, different factory, different people.

I stopped buying WD drives when then put SAMR on their WD Reds. That was the dumbest f*cking thing I'd ever seen, not making that mistake again. All of the non-enterprise-class stuff I've bought since that incident have been Ironwolf Pro with the 5 year warranty and free data recovery in case of failure. I have no idea how good the data recovery part of that is, because they go into arrays and I never need to recover the data, it's already been rebuilt on one of the hot spares.
 
Joined
Jun 10, 2014
Messages
2,985 (0.78/day)
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 5900X ||| Intel Core i7-3930K
Motherboard ASUS ProArt B550-CREATOR ||| Asus P9X79 WS
Cooling Noctua NH-U14S ||| Be Quiet Pure Rock
Memory Crucial 2 x 16 GB 3200 MHz ||| Corsair 8 x 8 GB 1333 MHz
Video Card(s) MSI GTX 1060 3GB ||| MSI GTX 680 4GB
Storage Samsung 970 PRO 512 GB + 1 TB ||| Intel 545s 512 GB + 256 GB
Display(s) Asus ROG Swift PG278QR 27" ||| Eizo EV2416W 24"
Case Fractal Design Define 7 XL x 2
Audio Device(s) Cambridge Audio DacMagic Plus
Power Supply Seasonic Focus PX-850 x 2
Mouse Razer Abyssus
Keyboard CM Storm QuickFire XT
Software Ubuntu
WD Gold are good quality drives, IIRC they're just the same line as the equivalent Black but with a longer warranty.
Ultrastar are still just Hitachi in all but name; Different tech, different factory, different people.
Perhaps WD Gold were a derivative of WD Black back in the days, but after they brought the naming back some years ago they have been rebranded Ultrastar HC500 series (CMR drives) without the SAS support and some other enterprisy stuff. (Not to be confused with the Ultrastar HC600 series, which are SMR drives.)

I stopped buying WD drives when then put SAMR on their WD Reds.
The WD Red/Red Pro have a terrible reputation, but I do wonder if "user errror" is a contributing factor or if they are just utter crap. What I mean is, these are typically used in "cheap" NAS boxes, many of which have little or no active cooling of the HDDs, which is very critical for 24-7 operation of HDDs.

But regardless, the pricing differences are so small, I really see no good reason to use anything but the best drives. WD Gold/Ultrastar have been achieved the lowest failure rates, with Seagate's and Toshiba's enterprise drives closely behind, yet still very good reliability. In my region WD Gold may sometimes even be cheaper than WD Red.
 
Joined
Jan 2, 2024
Messages
553 (1.70/day)
Location
Seattle
System Name DevKit
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 3600 ↗4.0GHz
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming X570-Plus WiFi
Cooling Koolance CPU-300-H06, Koolance GPU-180-L06, SC800 Pump
Memory 4x16GB Ballistix 3200MT/s ↗3800
Video Card(s) PowerColor RX 580 Red Devil 8GB ↗1380MHz ↘1105mV, PowerColor RX 7900 XT Hellhound 20GB
Storage 240GB Corsair MP510, 120GB KingDian S280
Display(s) Nixeus VUE-24 (1080p144)
Case Koolance PC2-601BLW + Koolance EHX1020CUV Radiator Kit
Audio Device(s) Oculus CV-1
Power Supply Antec Earthwatts EA-750 Semi-Modular
Mouse Easterntimes Tech X-08, Zelotes C-12
Keyboard Logitech 106-key, Romoral 15-Key Macro, Royal Kludge RK84
VR HMD Oculus CV-1
Software Windows 10 Pro Workstation, VMware Workstation 16 Pro, MS SQL Server 2016, Fan Control v120, Blender
Benchmark Scores Cinebench R15: 1590cb Cinebench R20: 3530cb (7.83x451cb) CPU-Z 17.01.64: 481.2/3896.8 VRMark: 8009
6TB/$180? Yeah I'll avoid that too. WD can continue celebrating their scummy practices in the corner, far tf away from my infra.
If I need an external HDD for whatever reason, I'll pack my antique Zen Vision.
You're singing praises to SanDisk, not WD.
Seems legit. A SanDisk USB is good enough to run my storage server without complaint.
Can't say that I trust much of WD's stuff given their awful history of causing grief for many, including myself.

1729375366491.png
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
8,265 (3.93/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
The WD Red/Red Pro have a terrible reputation, but I do wonder if "user errror" is a contributing factor or if they are just utter crap. What I mean is, these are typically used in "cheap" NAS boxes, many of which have little or no active cooling of the HDDs, which is very critical for 24-7 operation of HDDs.
I wouldn't dismiss the cooling abilities of cheap consumer NAS products. I have a wealth of experience in everything from the cheapest QNAP/Synology $200 ARM-powered plastic box, all the way up to large enterprise SAN solutions linking multiple shelves across multiple datacentres, and honestly the Synology DS220J I used was the worst-cooled NAS I've laid hands on and it was totally adequate - probably better than some of the name-brand rackmount stuff costing 5 or 6 figures.

Consumer stuff has to be consumer-proof for the warranty period and consumers are complete idiots.

When HPE, Pure, NetApp, or Dell provide you a storage solution, they know it's going in a climate-controlled server room or datacenter and design it to be just enough for that environment. When Synology/QNAP/ASUS design a NAS for your average buyer, they have to make sure it won't cook the disks when it's sucking in cat/dog hair, wedged between a wall that blocks the ventilation on one side and a set of drawers that block the ventilation on the other, and has random household detritus dropped on it from time to time....
 
Top