💾 Unlock the future of storage—where capacity meets endurance.
The HGST WD Ultrastar DC HC520 is a 12TB helium-sealed internal hard drive designed for data centers and hyperscale environments. Featuring a 7200 RPM spindle, SATA 6Gb/s interface, and 256MB cache, it delivers high capacity, speed, and reliability with a 2.5 million hour MTBF and power-efficient operation, backed by a 5-year limited warranty.
Hard Drive | 12 TB Mechanical Hard Disk |
Brand | HelioSeal |
Series | Ultrastar He12 |
Item model number | 0F30144 |
Item Weight | 1.68 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 5.79 x 4.01 x 1.03 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.79 x 4.01 x 1.03 inches |
Flash Memory Size | 6 TB |
Hard Drive Interface | SATA 6 GB/s |
Hard Drive Rotational Speed | 7200 RPM |
Manufacturer | HGST |
ASIN | B07PF1TVND |
Date First Available | March 19, 2019 |
G**R
Not the exact model advertised, but OK for me
I ordered the HUH721212ALE600, as advertised, but I received the HUH721212ALE604. The difference is that the 600 has Instant Secure Erase, while the 604 only has Secure Erase. A Western Digital tech brief explains the difference, but from my intended use, PC backup, it makes little difference. The 600 can instantly securely erase all data, while with the 604 you have to overwrite any data with new data to hide the old data. This can take a long time for a large drive like this one. I don’t need to hide any data as long as the drive is serviceable. Backblaze drive statistics for 2024 give the two drives nearly equivalent failure rates, both very low. So, bottom line, I don’t mind terribly being shipped a drive different from the one I ordered.The drive I received was manufactured in 2019, so the seller, Nekid Cow (really), provides their own 5-year warranty, though how it compares to the original, I don’t know. It is a new drive, with only 56 hours of use, which may be for manufacture's testing, burn-in, infant-mortality elimination, etc.This is the fourth HGST drive I have put into service, one now with 38,000 hours of service, and they all are healthy according to SMART. HGST was bought by Western Digital, but WD drives are equally reliable according to Backblaze published reliability reports.
K**S
i give up on this
First, I'm going to fault myself. I thought I had did my research on drives before pulling the trigger. i ultimately went with the HGST brand because it was getting good reviews and the helium tech seemed like a good buy in. This would have been my first drive in my NAS that I build. I failed to notice that this has POWER-DISABLED technology. I did not know what it was until i got this delivered. I have not been able to get this to work. For those who don't know, this was introduced a few years back and requires a special motherboard in order to allow the drive to be remotely disabled or rebooted. For us mortals, there is a work around for by disabling the 3rd pin in order to allow the drive to work. I ordered some kapton tape and covered the 3rd pin. When rebooting the PC and going into bios, I am able to see the drive. I then launch into windows 10 and the drive is not found. I go into disk management, still no drive. I reboot back into bios and the drive is no longer listed. I cut power to the machine for a few minutes and boot back up and it's the same cycle. I have just now ordered the molex to sata connector which bypasses the power going to the 3rd pin (which is recommended on the HGST site). Still no luck. It has been almost two weeks and I have not been able to get this to start. Unless you have a need for a drive to be power-disabled, I would steer clear of this drive. Now I'm stuck with a $330 brick unless I can return it. Very, very frustrated.
K**
“Is this disk any good?”
You might be asking yourself. There are several reviewers complaining that they could not get the drive to spin up due to an enterprise feature that leaves the drive off until it’s enclosure allows it to spin up. I didn’t have any trouble with it in my QNAP NAS — though I wouldn’t use it in a desktop. It spun up immediately and began rebuilding my array. I’m replacing 8TB WD Gold disks, bought a couple years ago, to increase my capacity. These disks are physically identical to my old ones. Seeing that definitely inspires confidence. Another reviewer complaint is that there is no warranty on these disks. That’s not true, these reviewers are not familiar with how hardware built for enterprise use are typically warranted. The manufacturer does provide the replacement disks, but not directly to the purchaser. They must be purchased from an authorized reseller, and reseller transacts the warranty replacement. If you buy these and the warranty is important to you, you should check whether the seller is authorized by WD or not before buying. These disks are being sold rather cheaply by some sellers for what they are. I’d guess that many of them are not authorized resellers and are basically selling them cheap because you are forfeiting the warranty option by buying from them.
A**R
Lasted for just over Five Years.
Worked well since : "Last purchased Feb 17, 2020." Now it's dead. It served me well, but I had hoped to get longer life from it. Regardless, too many other negative reviews and those saying that they received "used" drives. As a resulte, I'll pass on this brand for its replacement.
M**U
Be careful that you may receive old stock OEM disks
My disks was sold by TWONNY. These disks work well in my NAS. The power-on time read by SMART is only about one day for both disks.However, I would minus one star for the misleading information. The product name and image all suggests that these are new WD products. Only in the last entry of product details mentioned "OEM warranty". The truth is, both disks I received are old stock OEM disks. Both labeled Dell, one under WD brand and manufactured in 2020 Feb, the other under HGST brand and manufactured in 2019 Jan. I highly suggest you to reconsider it if you concern warranty.
M**R
A fabulous drive with a good cost per TB (and projected great reliability)
This is an enterprise-quality drive --- a big investment in reliability and huge capacity. This is the first drive I've purchased with more than 6-TB (my preferred drives to date have been Western Digital Black 6TB drives). I have to say, I'm largely a convert.One little gotcha -- as a newer drive, and one aimed at the enterprise market, the screw holes for mounting the drive are not the same as the standard ones used on 500-GB to 6-TB drives of years past. Two are the same, and two are different on the sides, and similarly on the back. So while it's plug compatible (as a SATA drive) some mounting brackets are not compatible with it. I have an older Mac tower with four disk slots (mounting brackets not compatible) and an external RAID array enclosure with 4 disk slots (mounting insertion completely compatible). So, buyer beware ... look at the pictures of where the mounting screw holes are, and make sure they match your setup (the change is readily visible ... not a slight misalignment, but some holes missing, some extra threaded holes).
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago