Just had a 2TB drive from Seagate fail on me without warning. I doubt I will buy another mechanical drive ever again and if I do, it will not be from Seagate.
It is not just my own personal experience, it well known that Seagate drives have a high failure rate.
I've never seen stats to validate that very popular forum rumor, but I have seen stats that sort of go against it, ironically.
Oh? Let's review..
A look at the quarterly and lifetime failure rates of 175,443 drives, including a comparison of failure rates of HDD and SSD boot drives.
www.backblaze.com
The AFR for 2020 dropped below 1% down to 0.93%. In 2019, it stood at 1.89%. That’s over a 50% drop year over year.
www.backblaze.com
Based on those numbers, the most reliable drives made are from HGST and Toshiba. Seagate doesn't fair so well. Especially when you take a closer look at the numbers.
Jack1n's concerns about Seagate are not outside the realm of reality. His concerns about mechanical HDD's however are somewhat flawed. SSD's do fail and they are only marginally more reliable than HDD's.
It's good to know the difference between HDDs and SSDs and understand how the different SSD technologies affect reliability.
www.backblaze.com
Seagate drives do generally tend to fail more often, but in context, we're taking about a difference of .45% failure rate when compared to other brands. Still, that is not an inconsiderable number given the the overall failure rate for Seagate drives is just below 2% while everyone else in the comparison is below 1%(using the annualized failure rate, not just last year).
However, in the scope of the great scheme of things, we're talking about failure rates that fall BELOW 2% on average. Folks, buy the drive that fits your needs and rest assured it is VERY likely to last you a long time. If you're worried about failures(and they do happen) invest in backups(spare drives, external drives, bluray recordables, etc..).