Seagate BarraCuda NE-ST8000DM004 8TB 5400 RPM 256MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5″ Internal Hard Drive Bare Drive

(3718 customer reviews)

Original price was: $235.78.Current price is: $147.69.

Seagate BarraCuda NE-ST8000DM004 8TB 5400 RPM 256MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5″ Internal Hard Drive Bare Drive

SKU: 46B1D811 Category:
Additional information
Best Seller Ranking

#3 in Desktop Internal Hard Drives

Brand

Seagate

Series

BarraCuda

Model

NE-ST8000DM004

Packaging

Bare Drive

Interface

SATA 6.0Gb/s

Capacity

8TB

NAND Flash Memory Type

Hard Drive

Recording Technology

SMR

RPM

5400 RPM

Cache

256MB

Features

Versatile HDDs for all your PC needs bring you industry-leading excellence in personal computing.For over 20 years the BarraCuda family has delivered super-reliable storage for the hard drive industry.Capacities up to 8TB for desktops

,

BarraCuda leads the market with the widest range of storage options available.Advanced Power modes help save energy without sacrificing performance.SATA 6Gb/s interface optimizes burst performance.

Usage

For Daily Computing

Form Factor

3.5"

Height maximum

26.11mm

Width maximum

101.85mm

Length maximum

146.99mm

First Listed on Newegg

April 08

,

2019

Reviews (3718)

3718 reviews for Seagate BarraCuda NE-ST8000DM004 8TB 5400 RPM 256MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5″ Internal Hard Drive Bare Drive

  1. Dominic J.

    Pros: For a 3.5 inch drive it is very thin
    Very quiet under load and idle
    No bad sectors or errors
    2 year warranty isn’t too bad in case something goes wrong.
    Benchmark performance results are listed below:
    Crystal Disk Mark:
    • Seq Q32T1: Read = 220.73 MB/s, Write = 145.27 MB/s
    • 4K Q32T1: Read = 2.09 MB/s, Write = 1.454 MB/s
    • Sequential: Read = 216.63 MB/s, Write = 165.37 MB/s
    • 4k: Read = 1.18 MB/s, Write = 1.42 MB/s
    ATTO Disk Benchmark:
    • Read: 214.41 MB/sec
    • Write: 175.16 MB/sec
    HD Tune
    • Minimum: 105.8 MB/s
    • Maximum: 210.2 MB/s
    • Average: 171.0 MB/s
    • Access Time: 14.2 ms
    • Burst Rate: 239.63 MB/s
    Power Consumption
    • Idle = 4.8 Watts
    • Load Read = 6.9 Watts
    • Load Write = 6.4 Watts
    Maximum Temperature while testing: 93.2 °F Cons: Write speeds are a bit low compared to the read speeds
    Despite many attempts the drive refused to enter its low power sleep state where the platters stop spinning and the head docks itself. Tried changing windows settings and bios settings but still couldn’t get it to sleep. Overall Review: Overall this drive performed very well for a mechanical hard drive while running relatively cool. It’s good to see that mechanical drives are still improving and finally getting close to the SATA II (3 Gbps) barrier. Considering its low price, this is a great choice if you need a drive with more space than then your SSD.
    *All tests were conducted three times to ensure accuracy and repeatability of results.

  2. Matthew M.

    Pros: • Almost half as fast as SATA SSDs. Twice as fast as older HDDs.
    • Great for large media and some gaming situations.
    • I’ve found I can trust on Seagate to provide fast and fair customer service and RMAs should you need it. Cons: • Average 2 year warranty
    • Being slightly thinner offers better spacing for cooling if you mount these in groups but it can present issues in hot-swap caddies. Mine, for instance, wouldn’t mechanically eject the drive unless I lifted it slightly. Overall Review: I was rather surprised how well Seagate’s new “low-end” mechanical drives performed. While you won’t get solid half as fast speeds across the board compared to SATA SSDs these drives are half as fast in Sequential Read/Write speeds. Does that mean you’ll get a drive half as good as a SATA SSD for practical purposes? Not exactly but if you do a lot of larger file transfers or read from larger files (like HD media) this will certainly be a nice compromise. It’ll also be useful in some games, but not necessarily across the board like a SATA SSD.
    All things considered, this is a fantastic stop-gap if you’re interested in economical space while getting the fastest HDD you can at a reasonable price before stepping up to a SSD drive.
    CrystalDiskMark 5 Benchmark:
    Sequential Read (Q= 32,T= 1) : 220.443 MB/s
    Sequential Write (Q= 32,T= 1) : 213.297 MB/s
    Random Read 4KiB (Q= 32,T= 1) : 1.552 MB/s [ 378.9 IOPS]
    Random Write 4KiB (Q= 32,T= 1) : 1.424 MB/s [ 347.7 IOPS]
    Sequential Read (T= 1) : 219.373 MB/s
    Sequential Write (T= 1) : 213.296 MB/s
    Random Read 4KiB (Q= 1,T= 1) : 0.665 MB/s [ 162.4 IOPS]
    Random Write 4KiB (Q= 1,T= 1) : 1.362 MB/s [ 332.5 IOPS]
    Test : 1024 MiB [F: 0.0% (0.2/931.5 GiB)] (x5) [Interval=5 sec]

  3. Sean R.

    Pros: – Arrived with no read/write issues
    – Noticeable performance improvement compared to old drive
    – No problems under GNU/Linux Cons: – None Overall Review: – Under Fedora Workstation 25, the drive benchmarks the following averages with a sample size of 10 MB: 155 MB/s read, 91.2 MB/s write, 14.36 msec access time
    – Testing done on a BIOSTAR A880G+ motherboard and Phenom II X4
    – Drive ran continuously for 21 days with no signs of problem

  4. Milton B.

    Pros: This is a perfect HDD for any of your needs. Gaming, Video, Music, Photos and more.
    Seagate BarraCuda 3TB SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5” Hard Drive. 3TB of storage for a great value.
    6Gb/s Interface Optimizes Burst Performance; 64MB Cache
    Instant Secure Erase for Safe Drive Retirement. Cons: None Overall Review: When it comes to HDD speed for fast performance this drive did not disappoint. For a better review, I removed an SSD and restored for a clean Windows 10. Loaded it up with all my files, music, games, videos, everything. Using my PC over a few weeks, I found very little that would stop me from using this over my SSD. If you load up your SSD too much it slows down, this keeps flying along loaded up. Yes, a slower start time, but no noticeable difference doing everyday things and no disappointment gaming, my FPS was the same.
    This is a great choice for a main drive, secondary drive, external (boxed) and security system drive. The drive is quiet and runs on the cool side.
    This is a bare drive, meaning HDD only. No power or SATA cable supplied. For most installers, this will not be a problem. SATA and jumper power cables are inexpensive. This is a recommend to buy drive.

  5. Carol C.

    Pros: Overall, the drive performs very well. The capacity is a bit on the small side, but a very good drive nonetheless. The physical size of the drive is slightly thinner than the standard 3.5″ internal hard drive, which also makes it slightly lighter in weight.
    Here are my test results from ATTO Disk Benchmark:
    Average write: 208 MB/s
    Average read: 218 MB/s Cons: none Overall Review: I’ve been using Seagate drives for decades and they are still one of my top brands when choosing hard drives.

  6. Kevin D.

    Pros: This drive is light, quiet and thin. The price is really good considering the size and speed of the drive. It has a large 64MB Cache which greatly speeds up sequential read and write operations. It supports the SATA 6.0Gb/s interface. This drive will not overheat your case! The hottest it ever got during benchmarking and formatting was just under 95F (that would be a cool day where I live in Phoenix!). The drive, in my testing, was whisper quiet. There is nothing worse than a loud hard drive, clunking and rattling when you are trying to work. Cons: None so far. Overall Review: The drive was recognized right away, and took less than 1 hour for a full format. I always do a full format (as opposed to a quick format) on every drive before putting it into production. This is a good way to weed out weak drives before they can cause problems.
    The drive was very quick in benchmark tests (Crystal Disk Mark):
    Sequential read speed was 212.9 MB/s
    Sequential write speed was between 203 and 210 MB/s
    As fast as this drive is, random read/write speeds were, of course, predictably slow:
    Random read speed was between .670 and .733 MB/s
    Random write speed was between 1.341 and 1.453 MB/s
    With all the advancements we have seen in hard drive density, it’s amazing how little random read and write speeds have improved. Of course, SSDs don’t have the same physical limitations.
    This is just my personal opinion, but I really doubt that so-called “performance” drives are worth the money in most cases. With the lightning fast speeds this drive is getting (at this price point), I think it is really in the sweet spot of price and performance. With 64 MB cache and rotation speed of 7200 RPM, you get good value for the money.

  7. Peter P.

    Pros: Two year warranty
    10/6/2017 an update on how this drive has performed. In a word-Flawless.
    In the age of uber mass production and even cheaper prices per GB ( Listen up sonny, back when gas was affordable, a 47 Gigabyte(!) seagate scsi drive cost me $500 and I was overjoyed to get it ( very short supplies) oh yeah its like 18 years old and while a little bearing noise is present it still works like new. you have to start treating current consumer grade hard drives like the 8-track tapes they are and be ready to clone and replace them every couple of years. come on folks under $30 TB?. I’m sure they’d be plenty reliable at $100 TB, like the so-called enterprise class drives.
    I’ll be the first to chime in that it stinks to get a stinker, especially if you don’t install it for a couple of months. I’ve been using seagate for a long time and never was wronged, which is pretty good in the long term players market.
    Consider the time you’ve spent building your digital archive. clone your data to the replacement and retire the original while you have no doubts it can spit your data up if need be. I’m on a two year cycle for the SSD that is my main boot drive, not that I’ve had any trouble, but I have to be prepared as losing my work PC for a day would be painful.
    I still rate it….
    ——————————-
    Good Value
    Quiet
    Passed without fault my torture tests, which includes killing power while writing a big file and an overnight surface test.
    No Bad sectors out of the box. Cons: For those who buy on impulse or don’t fully read descriptions, there are no cables or fixing screws included with a _bare drive_ However, they can always be found for just a few bucks.
    Unless you have a specific reason, stay away from locking sata cables. Easy to damage a drive if you “forget” that the cables lock in place. Overall Review: I’m hoping Seagate has tilted their budgets to better QA on products people trust their important memories to, even when they are foolish enough not to keep a full readable backup on an external drive.
    I guess we’ll see how many people complain about issues on this new series of hard drives.
    The 3TB range is pretty optimal for a whole bunch of reasons and with prices hovering around $25-30 a TB this drive falls into the sweet spot of brand loyalty. You can populate an array without breaking the budget.
    Seagate drives appear to have had some quality issues in the past if you read the reviews, but consider all the working drives people don’t care to write a review about.
    While today’s manufacturing systems have reduced prices drastically, we’re packing data tighter then ever and even a minor fault will result in lost data. (like all the pics from your bachelor party!). Keep good backups.
    I consider today’s drives sort of disposable; if you do also, have a look at the other drives in Seagates line, specifically the Firecuda, with it’s five year warranty. Easily worth the extra costs if you can get by with a 2TB unit and do not have the budget to purchase enterprise level hardware. A five year warranty shows confidence. I need confidence.
    After two years my drives get replaced and I use the old drive as a long term backup and I have a box at the bank holding my drives from the last ten years. One of em wouldn’t spin up during the annual review. I eventually broke the stiction (GTS) and was able to mount the drive and copy all the data back to my PC. What’s a ten year old 80GB drive worth ? ( $10) The data on it?..well you don’t want to know what that is worth now do you?
    I’m using this drive in a HTPC as the primary recording drive now, data rates are what I expected, your results will most certainly vary but in the 3TB drive segment, the Seagate puts on a good show at a competitive price.
    I’d rate it as a good buy with it’s two year warranty and five eggs
    I’ll update this review in the event of something noteworthy happens, but I expect it to be smooth sailing

  8. Carol C.

    Pros: This is a large 4TB drive. It’s 5400RPM, so the read/write speeds aren’t the best. I tested this drive at average 168MB/s write and 172MB/s read. I have been running this drive for almost a year and it still runs great. Cons: none

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