









Seagate (STEB8000100) Expansion Desktop 8TB External Hard Drive HDD – USB 3.0 for PC Laptop
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Roger Kelly
> 24 hourFirst of all I live in New Zealand and I was very impressed with just how quickly from first ordering this product, to having the order in my hands even though I live in a corner of the South Pacific. It took labout 5 days and I was expecting a few weeks or more. The external hard drive arrived securely packaged which was very good. The Seagate 8TB is a very good external HD and it has been working flawlessly with my Xbox One S and will swap straight into my new Xbox One X this coming November for my 4K textured and Digital downloaded games, which is why I need the extra hard drive space. I was so impressed, that I bought another 8TB External HDD from Amazon, which is now with my PS4 Pro, so between the two external 8TB hard drives, both my consoles are set for years to come, as far as hard drive storage space is concerned. Both are running as they should be with no issues. I am very pleased with my purchase and would recommend purchasing this external 8TB hard drive and ordering from Amazon, with no second thoughts. I would not hesitate to recommend Amazon and this Seagate Expansion 8TB External hard Drive to anyone that is interested. Great quick service. AAA+++ Experience.
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Omar M.
> 24 hourThis was actually my second Seagate external hard drive. My first was only 2 TB so when looking for an upgrade I was expecting the same reliability I have seen in the past. This was actually a gift from my wife to me for my birthday so I really appreciate it. Ease of use: Extremely easy as its plug and play on my windows 10 pc. All I had to do was plug in and it was ready to use. Reliability: Here is what got me to 5 stars. First in general its just plain out fast. A lot faster than my older model. And im not only referring to moving data back and forth but also coming out of sleep mode easily less than 3 seconds give or take. The sole purpose for me having this drive is for my media center. Im using it as storage for all my music, movies and pictures for my Plex server. As I have particular libraries shared with my family I have multiple people streaming at any given time and have yet to see any issues with drive performance. I have to say that I would def recommend this to anyone looking for an upgrade at a reasonable price for storage. I do have one negative comment, and that is a usual one for external drives so it should come as no shock. The reason I got an external for my media center rather than internal was the fact that when I travel especially out of the country I take my movies with me. That being said, this unit requires it own power supply as other smaller drives utilizing USB 3.0 can take power from whatever they are plugged into. Again, that being said, still doesnt take away from the performance gains I have see with the drive, let alone the capacity upgrade.
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kanglar
> 24 hourFirst thing to note is that these are SMR drives. What is SMR? It means Shingled Magnetic Recording, basically the data on the drive is written overlapped like shingles on a roof. This means you can get more data on each disk platter, hence less platters for a given size and thus the drive is cheaper. Ok thats great right? Well the problem is this DRASTICALLY slows down the write speed for long sequential writes. It can get bogged down during large writes and become very very slow, like 10MB/s on average slow. Reads are fine it is only writing that is affected. That being said, the SMR technology does make this drive one of the best for $s/TB on the market, just dont expect amazing performance from it. You definitely get what you pay for, and for its intended purpose as a backup drive it works fine. I cant speak for the long term reliability as I havent had them for very long, but it has a 1 year warranty (most drives have a 2 or 3 year). The warranties are specifically calculated to balance between how cheap the manufacturer can go on the components and how many RMAs they will get when a certain expected % of the components fail. I wouldnt expect to get 5 years out of this drive, not that its not possible but you are relatively lucky if you do. Summary: -SMR = slow writes -Only 1 year warranty = components of meh quality -For the price and purpose, not a bad drive
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Morgan Russman
> 24 hourI bought 2 of these, one of which I dont nessesarily think I needed that much at the time as I had less then 1.5 tb at the time, which was January of 2018. I think I now (9/2019) have a little more then 1.5 tb, and I bought a 2nd one due to my 2 tb drive having less the 500 gb left. Yeah, I could have bought 2 4 tb portable drives and had a lot more portability then what this product offers and saved a bit of money, bit hey. The idea of portability is not too much in this devices favor if you want to use it on the run or if you are using it when the power goes out, since it needs 110/120 volts AC (or what ever power you use in your country) to operate. Yes, it does use USB power to connect to your computer, but it also requires house current to operate too. On the bright side, it does add additional storage to your computer. Part of the additional reason I got the drive other then due to my one drive getting a bit small is because I use a dash cam and a video and picture camera too, and a few of the videos I do put up on YouTube (9/2019), and on top of which I have multiple computers that I have too.
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Hawaii guy
> 24 hourNormally I dont review things until Ive had them for a long enough time to make useful comments. In this case, I wanted to comment on a couple things about it working with Windows 7 and Windows Backup. First, the disk is formatted MBR (I just bought this June 2015 from Amazon) Im running Window 7 Home Premium, Service Pack 1, with latest updates (as of 7/3/2015). I plugged the drive into a USB 2.0 port and Windows Explorer told me there were 3.63 TB available (no 2 TB limitation on how much Windows 7 can access). -File backup works fine. After completing, Im able to browse for files in the back up that were part of those selected for backing up. I havent tried a restore, but it looks like it would work. -Image backup fails with an I/O error. Time to try other software--Ill start with Macrium Reflect Ive now added a USB 3.0 PCI-e card (Anker USB 3.0 PCI-E 4 port card) to my desktop system and tried copying a couple 2 GB files to check what speeds I see: -USB 2.0 built into my Gateway DX4840: 27-40 MB/sec -USB 3.0 (Anker USB 3.0 without UASP mode): 60-80 MB/sec -USB 3.0 (Anker USB 3.0 with UASP mode on): 98-102 MB/sec -Copying 160 GB of picture files (75K files in 2.5K directories), started about 30 MB/sec and rose to 59 MB/sec after a couple minutes. These speeds are probably more dependent on what USB 3.0 card you have and what you are copying than the capabilities of the Seagate disk.
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JWINK
> 24 hourThis review is for the 8TB hard drive. Included with the external hard drive are the instructions, a power cord, approximately 65 inches in length and a 3.0 USB cable, approximately 45 inches in length. This is one of the few times that I don’t have to complain about short cables provided with external drives as these are plenty long enough. I got this drive to use as extended storage for my PS4. I have previously been using the Seagate Expansion 1TB external drive for extended storage but after a recent game buying splurge, I have run out of space with that drive. I have two of those drives and both are approximately three years old ago and are still going strong (one as the PS4 drive and one as a security cam drive) with no issues. Both of those drives were great for portability as well because of their small size. This 8 TB isn’t quite as portable as the smaller Seagate drives at approximately 7 inches by 5 inches by 2-inch thickness and this drive requires a power supply unlike the smaller drives but considering the space that this has and that it is primarily being used on my PS4, it is less of an issue. Like all extended storage drives for the PS4, it has to be formatted by the PS4 but that is quick and painless to do. The transfer of files from my main PS4 and the 1 TB drive to this drive took a bit of time but that is mainly because there is no easy way to move the game files from expansion drive to another expansion drive in the PS4. The file transfer was fairly speedy otherwise. I have use a variety of brand name drives, including WD, Toshiba and these Seagates. I have not had any issues with either the Seagate drives or the WD as they both make very reliable drives and I expect the same from this drive. With this drive priced at about 18 dollars per TB, it is a reasonable cost for this size drive. Although I am not using it for that purpose, with this drive being USB 3.0, I expect this is just as speedy as most USB 3.0 drives on a Windows based computer. This has a power/hard drive light in the back-left side of the case. Although I am not personally a fan of the light in the back, it does make it less distracting and since I am using this as a drive for the PS4, being able to see the light isn’t a huge issue. Oddly, these drives only have 1-year warranty, unlike the 1TB Seagate expansions that I bought that had 3-year warranties. Maybe that is a trend with manufacturers for lesser warranties, but I hope that doesn’t indicates its drive reliability. I will update my review if I have any issues with durability. Overall, I like the drive for my PS4 expansion drive and it is so far working as it should with no slow down or stuttering when playing a variety of games. 4 stars
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E. Chang
> 24 hourWith data storage becoming more and more necessary with everything under the sun becoming digitized, Ive had in recent years been forced to switch from DVDR platters and Caseline cases to external hard drives. My first external HDs were Seagate and WD USB-powered drives and these (pairs of at 2 and 4 TB) have been fairly reliable. I eventually ran out of space and decided to centralize my storage into 2 8 TB external drives, each with independent power, thinking that would make these have faster access. Long story short, these work just fine after 3 months, access time is exactly the same as the USB models, however every time I need to read one of these drives it takes about 20 seconds for it to wake up (unless Ive accessed it in the last 20 minutes or something). My old USB drives used to sometimes need a few seconds of wake up time as well, but only 5 seconds. This is disappointing since I was hoping that the independent power source would negate this spinning up time. Oh well, at this point Ill just stick with these until the SS drives become practical for normal consumers.... Btw I always have 2 sets of external hard drives as a precaution against failure. Also more and more of those old DVDrs are starting to fail. I have a feeling well all be back to vinyl and self-stick photo albums in a few decades...
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John Ware
> 24 hourI bought it cuz I was tired of deleting files that I needed to make space. no issues still working great 5 years and 5 months. buy it you fool!
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ARTHUR M. ARCHMBAULT
> 24 hourThis is the best external hard drive out there I started of with western digital that had 2 drives in one box it was suppose to mirror each other so I started putting my photos and movies on it every once in awhile I would check and my items were on 2 separate drive then one day I turned on my computer and the external hard drive didn’t show I called up western digital and gave me to man to go through different prompts that didn’t work they sent me a mailer to send in my external hard drive so I did about 10 days later they sent my a nice letter and a new external hard drive it said in so many words they couldn’t get my items either I lost it all so I was talking to a friend of mine and he told me about Seagate he said what he does it he has 2 separate hard drives and put his items on one and then copies them to another one separate he said a lot of people use the cloud but you pay so much every month he said this way he can take his projects on one of his hard drive to work and plug it into a tv and it shows and this way he has his other one at home so that is what I do now with Seagate and haven’t had any problems keep up the good work seagate
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bratzdad
> 24 hourReally, really fast delivery. Product as advertised. One of the largest drives you can buy at an affordable price point. There are 8TB drives out there as of this writing but the cost-premium does not make as much sense because prices on those even-larger devces have not dropped yet due to the relative infancy of these new device product cycle. Simple installation (the installation guide is a single picture), and the device booted and formatted within minutes. Only 4.5TB available after formatting but adequate for moving files off of several lower-capacity drives into this newer, more-reliable device - and that should allow most users for a few more years of reliabilty for their storage needs. The connector wire appears to be a USB 3.0 Type A Male Connector 2 on the computer side to a USB 3.0 Type Micro B Male on the drive end. The cable is backward compatable to older USB formats such as USB 2.0 which was my application. Write speeds were around 18MBs/sec while drive was still relatively empty, but this was on a USB 2.0 port. The drive is slightly smaller and lighter than previous versions of consumer external storage devices. The performance appears to be fast and solid. The properties showed that the device was pre-formatted NTFS. I always copy the pre-loaded files that come with the drive to another location and then do a quick format with NTFS before moving the files back. I learned the hard way that filling a humongous drive on the factory format is a recipe for disaster because after the drive gets filled up, those files suddenlybecome unavailable right when you dont, of course, have an even-larger drive to move them to before the drive fails because you just bought the largest drive available. This is also known as a storage disaster. My sage advice: format that puppy when you first receive it - and avoid mucho-heartburn down the road. My pleasure,