Simplify your digital storage needs with this Seagate 8TB NAS desktop drive. This drive is optimized for network-attached storage with AgileArray, which enables dual-plane balancing and RAID optimization in multi-bay environments. This is an ideal solution for desktops, all-in-one PCs, and home servers.
Simplify your digital storage needs with this Seagate 8TB NAS desktop drive. This drive is optimized for network-attached storage with AgileArray, which enables dual-plane balancing and RAID optimization in multi-bay environments. This is an ideal solution for desktops, all-in-one PCs, and home servers.
Seagate 8TB IronWolf 7200 RPM SATA III 3.5" Internal NAS HDD ST8000VN0022
Simplify your digital storage needs with this Seagate 8TB NAS desktop drive. This drive is optimized for network-attached storage with AgileArray, which enables dual-plane balancing and RAID optimization in multi-bay environments. This is an ideal solution for desktops, all-in-one PCs, and home servers.
Simplify your digital storage needs with this Seagate 8TB NAS desktop drive. This drive is optimized for network-attached storage with AgileArray, which enables dual-plane balancing and RAID optimization in multi-bay environments. This is an ideal solution for desktops, all-in-one PCs, and home servers.
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The lowest price for Seagate 8TB IronWolf 7200 RPM SATA III 3.5" Internal NAS HDD ST8000VN0022 right now is $189.00 at eBay.com.au, compared across 2 retailers.
The all-time low was $189.00 on 25 Apr 2026. That's the lowest price we've ever tracked — a great time to buy.
Prices last updated 7 May 2026.
Last updated at 07/05/2026 21:12:13
Seagate IronWolf ST8000VN0022 8TB Internal 7200 RPM 3.5" SATA Hard Drive 100%
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NEW Seagate IronWolf ST8000VN0022 7200 RPM 3.5" 8TB Internal Hard Drive
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Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Seagate Ironwolf St8000vn0022 7200 Rpm 3.5" 8tb Internal Hard Drive
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Seagate ST8000VN0022 8TB SATA Hard Drive
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Seagate ST8000VN0022 8TB SATA Hard Drive
Seagate ST8000VN0022 8TB SATA Hard Drive
originally posted on bestbuy.com
This 8 terabyte Seagate Nas Drive fits well in the Seagate Raid system. However, I don't have the time to get the help to possibly. create multiple volumes on the Seagate Raid then. it's slow..The odd thing about it is the four terabyte nas drives. from Seagate seemed to have a better aspect. to them for lasting longer and running a little bit faster.Seagate does temp drop the ball a little bit every now and then like there three terabyte and 1.5 terabyte drives. I will not be upgrading. 232 gigabyte raid system. for media service. Obviously the smaller c. Seagate hard drives are still improvement over the larger ones in the NASA environment.Now the question lies. who will be given their business? of being a leader in the raid systems or will raid vanish ... MoreThis 8 terabyte Seagate Nas Drive fits well in the Seagate Raid system. However, I don't have the time to get the help to possibly. create multiple volumes on the Seagate Raid then. it's slow..The odd thing about it is the four terabyte nas drives. from Seagate seemed to have a better aspect. to them for lasting longer and running a little bit faster.Seagate does temp drop the ball a little bit every now and then like there three terabyte and 1.5 terabyte drives. I will not be upgrading. 232 gigabyte raid system. for media service. Obviously the smaller c. Seagate hard drives are still improvement over the larger ones in the NASA environment.Now the question lies. who will be given their business? of being a leader in the raid systems or will raid vanish completely with these new 16 to 30 terabyte heat or gas backed storage systems?So far, no failures just. slow downs near hits of failing. but then again, I'm using an eight terabyte As a 4 terabyte system. doesn't make sense for me to upgrade my. Seagate raid, which has lost support for its OS as well as its box..I would recommend talking to people who have other types of raid systems to see if. plugging in Seagate nasses actually have. an advantage.
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
[Update 3] The replacement drives Seagate sent have been working fine after several months - Bumped the rating up. [Update 2] I RMA'd my dead drive and Seagate sent a replacement. No hassles, thankfully. Things got off to a rocky start with these drives, hopefully Seagate will make things right with other customers who experience failures or other issues and have improved newer versions of the drive. +1 egg. [Update] I ordered two of these and now one is dead after about 14 months. I filed a support ticket with Seagate and they basically told me that I'm out of luck since I can't run their Windows-based diagnostic utility (I run Linux). I sent them output from smartctl showing SAT command failures but they refused to work with that. I don't expect them to support ... More[Update 3] The replacement drives Seagate sent have been working fine after several months - Bumped the rating up. [Update 2] I RMA'd my dead drive and Seagate sent a replacement. No hassles, thankfully. Things got off to a rocky start with these drives, hopefully Seagate will make things right with other customers who experience failures or other issues and have improved newer versions of the drive. +1 egg. [Update] I ordered two of these and now one is dead after about 14 months. I filed a support ticket with Seagate and they basically told me that I'm out of luck since I can't run their Windows-based diagnostic utility (I run Linux). I sent them output from smartctl showing SAT command failures but they refused to work with that. I don't expect them to support everything but it would be nice if they showed at least some competency with standard, open-source tools that a lot of enterprises use. For mounting into a 5.25" bay, iStarUSA RP-HDD35V2 brackets worked: https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816215435&ignorebbr=1 For noise and firmware: My drives came with SC60 firmware and according to the internet SC61 is the newest revision that helps solve the noise issue. Fortunately there is a Linux tool (seaflashlin) for 32 and 64-bit systems, but unfortunately I had to obtain the SC61 firmware from a third-party website since Seagate's website didn't have it listed for my two drives' serial numbers (The FW I found claims to be compatible with Iron Wolf and NAS drives with FW version SC60). Hopefully I'll see an explicitly supported FW version from Seagate, but until then SC61 *seems* to work and makes the noise tolerable. I added +1 egg to my original rating since with the special mounting brackets and FW update this drive seems to work, albeit with a fair bit of effort on the customer's part (it's not totally defective at least).
originally posted on adorama.com
Just purchased these drives so to soon to say anything about reliability. Purchased these because it was a good price and was able to order all 8 drives. For those considering these drives mine where OEM drives in plain cardbord boxes, not the nice retail packaging. I checked the Seagate site and the warranty and everything looked good. I do wish that it said OEM in the description as the picture looks like the retail drive.
Seagate IronWolf ST8000VN0022 8TB Internal 7200 RPM 3.5" SATA Hard Drive 100%
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
NEW Seagate IronWolf ST8000VN0022 7200 RPM 3.5" 8TB Internal Hard Drive
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Seagate Ironwolf St8000vn0022 7200 Rpm 3.5" 8tb Internal Hard Drive
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Seagate ST8000VN0022 8TB SATA Hard Drive
30-day returns
Seagate ST8000VN0022 8TB SATA Hard Drive
This 8 terabyte Seagate Nas Drive fits well in the Seagate Raid system. However, I don't have the time to get the help to possibly. create multiple volumes on the Seagate Raid then. it's slow..The odd thing about it is the four terabyte nas drives. from Seagate seemed to have a better aspect. to them for lasting longer and running a little bit faster.Seagate does temp drop the ball a little bit every now and then like there three terabyte and 1.5 terabyte drives. I will not be upgrading. 232 gigabyte raid system. for media service. Obviously the smaller c. Seagate hard drives are still improvement over the larger ones in the NASA environment.Now the question lies. who will be given their business? of being a leader in the raid systems or will raid vanish ... MoreThis 8 terabyte Seagate Nas Drive fits well in the Seagate Raid system. However, I don't have the time to get the help to possibly. create multiple volumes on the Seagate Raid then. it's slow..The odd thing about it is the four terabyte nas drives. from Seagate seemed to have a better aspect. to them for lasting longer and running a little bit faster.Seagate does temp drop the ball a little bit every now and then like there three terabyte and 1.5 terabyte drives. I will not be upgrading. 232 gigabyte raid system. for media service. Obviously the smaller c. Seagate hard drives are still improvement over the larger ones in the NASA environment.Now the question lies. who will be given their business? of being a leader in the raid systems or will raid vanish completely with these new 16 to 30 terabyte heat or gas backed storage systems?So far, no failures just. slow downs near hits of failing. but then again, I'm using an eight terabyte As a 4 terabyte system. doesn't make sense for me to upgrade my. Seagate raid, which has lost support for its OS as well as its box..I would recommend talking to people who have other types of raid systems to see if. plugging in Seagate nasses actually have. an advantage.
[Update 3] The replacement drives Seagate sent have been working fine after several months - Bumped the rating up. [Update 2] I RMA'd my dead drive and Seagate sent a replacement. No hassles, thankfully. Things got off to a rocky start with these drives, hopefully Seagate will make things right with other customers who experience failures or other issues and have improved newer versions of the drive. +1 egg. [Update] I ordered two of these and now one is dead after about 14 months. I filed a support ticket with Seagate and they basically told me that I'm out of luck since I can't run their Windows-based diagnostic utility (I run Linux). I sent them output from smartctl showing SAT command failures but they refused to work with that. I don't expect them to support ... More[Update 3] The replacement drives Seagate sent have been working fine after several months - Bumped the rating up. [Update 2] I RMA'd my dead drive and Seagate sent a replacement. No hassles, thankfully. Things got off to a rocky start with these drives, hopefully Seagate will make things right with other customers who experience failures or other issues and have improved newer versions of the drive. +1 egg. [Update] I ordered two of these and now one is dead after about 14 months. I filed a support ticket with Seagate and they basically told me that I'm out of luck since I can't run their Windows-based diagnostic utility (I run Linux). I sent them output from smartctl showing SAT command failures but they refused to work with that. I don't expect them to support everything but it would be nice if they showed at least some competency with standard, open-source tools that a lot of enterprises use. For mounting into a 5.25" bay, iStarUSA RP-HDD35V2 brackets worked: https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816215435&ignorebbr=1 For noise and firmware: My drives came with SC60 firmware and according to the internet SC61 is the newest revision that helps solve the noise issue. Fortunately there is a Linux tool (seaflashlin) for 32 and 64-bit systems, but unfortunately I had to obtain the SC61 firmware from a third-party website since Seagate's website didn't have it listed for my two drives' serial numbers (The FW I found claims to be compatible with Iron Wolf and NAS drives with FW version SC60). Hopefully I'll see an explicitly supported FW version from Seagate, but until then SC61 *seems* to work and makes the noise tolerable. I added +1 egg to my original rating since with the special mounting brackets and FW update this drive seems to work, albeit with a fair bit of effort on the customer's part (it's not totally defective at least).
Just purchased these drives so to soon to say anything about reliability. Purchased these because it was a good price and was able to order all 8 drives. For those considering these drives mine where OEM drives in plain cardbord boxes, not the nice retail packaging. I checked the Seagate site and the warranty and everything looked good. I do wish that it said OEM in the description as the picture looks like the retail drive.
Had issues with 2 non-approved hard drives in my Synology NAS 1019 . The Seagate Iron wolf NAS drives that are approved for use on my Synology NAS are working great. Purchased 8 TB drives which should provide sufficient backup space into the distant future. Very pleased with these drives.
Lots of choices to be had in the hard drive market but cutting corners on on your choice/purchase of one shouldn't be one of them. The Seagate IronWolf NAS hard drive series are almost as good as it gets and has earned a top spot in performance and reliability. I have 12 of these drives in a RAID 10 external NAS enclosure used for shared data and backups. That works out to a usable 46TB of storage. Five of them were purchased at Best Buy. No drive failures yet but with RAID 10 if one (or more) do fail, you simply replace the bad drive with a new one and after powering the device up, the drive gets automatically rebuilt. Doesn't get any more easy than that. All that said, these drives are a bargain considering their longevity/MTBF. I wouldn't hesitate recommending ... MoreLots of choices to be had in the hard drive market but cutting corners on on your choice/purchase of one shouldn't be one of them. The Seagate IronWolf NAS hard drive series are almost as good as it gets and has earned a top spot in performance and reliability. I have 12 of these drives in a RAID 10 external NAS enclosure used for shared data and backups. That works out to a usable 46TB of storage. Five of them were purchased at Best Buy. No drive failures yet but with RAID 10 if one (or more) do fail, you simply replace the bad drive with a new one and after powering the device up, the drive gets automatically rebuilt. Doesn't get any more easy than that. All that said, these drives are a bargain considering their longevity/MTBF. I wouldn't hesitate recommending these drives to anybody. The Seagate IronWolf NAS Pro (even better specs/performance - costs more) is also a great choice if you have deeper pockets.
Though the drives have been reliable so far and perform on par with my beloved WD drives in my other server, I'm knocking off an egg for the noise level. IDK, the noise is annoying, but it's not a deal breaker. I would advise not installing these in a library or a bedroom. The 39 to 40c temps are concerning to me as well, but according to Seagate, that is in spec. I guess I'm just used to WD drives and I've become a WD fanboy over the years having zero problems with their products. Hopefully these drives will last a few years and I won't have to deal with Seagate's poor service. I haven't had to deal with Seagate for a bum drive in quite a few years, but back in the day, it was a nightmare to get them to make things right. WD drive rma's are painless and easy. I've ... MoreThough the drives have been reliable so far and perform on par with my beloved WD drives in my other server, I'm knocking off an egg for the noise level. IDK, the noise is annoying, but it's not a deal breaker. I would advise not installing these in a library or a bedroom. The 39 to 40c temps are concerning to me as well, but according to Seagate, that is in spec. I guess I'm just used to WD drives and I've become a WD fanboy over the years having zero problems with their products. Hopefully these drives will last a few years and I won't have to deal with Seagate's poor service. I haven't had to deal with Seagate for a bum drive in quite a few years, but back in the day, it was a nightmare to get them to make things right. WD drive rma's are painless and easy. I've rma'd a handful of WD drives for work over the years and had no issues. Fast turn around no questions asked. Hope this helps someone that is on the fence. At the end of the day, if I had to do the whole order over again today, I'd go with the WD plus drives.
In 2019 I purchased two Seagate Ironwolf 4tb drives for my Drobo NAS. My drives performed well, running non-stop for 5 years until I recently upgraded my NAS to Synology...so did my drives. Purchased two Seagate 8tb Ironwolfs to match the other two 4tb, haven't had any issues or drive failures. Stick with the faster 7200 speeds, huge difference as compared to the 5400. Best Buy also had the best cost, and I shopped around too.
I've been avoiding Seagate HDD products since the late 90s-early '00s because the QC on them was so bad they'd fail just sitting in a room with a running computer. One good experience with an internal Firecuda SD drive made me think that perhaps something had changed, so I got four of these IronWolf drives to us in my WD PR4100 in RAID 10 as a media drive.These were the least used drives in my system, with the majority of their use being in short write operations for media files and read operations for streaming music. The most intensely they are ever used is during a full backup every Sunday. Yet sure enough, drive 3 and then 2 go within 24 hours of each other, wrecking the second mirror in my RAID array with drive 0 in the primary mirror signaling failure ... MoreI've been avoiding Seagate HDD products since the late 90s-early '00s because the QC on them was so bad they'd fail just sitting in a room with a running computer. One good experience with an internal Firecuda SD drive made me think that perhaps something had changed, so I got four of these IronWolf drives to us in my WD PR4100 in RAID 10 as a media drive.These were the least used drives in my system, with the majority of their use being in short write operations for media files and read operations for streaming music. The most intensely they are ever used is during a full backup every Sunday. Yet sure enough, drive 3 and then 2 go within 24 hours of each other, wrecking the second mirror in my RAID array with drive 0 in the primary mirror signaling failure minutes after that. Fortunately I back this NAS up to the MyCloud Mirror I once thought to replace with it or my stuff would be hosed.I'm not going to bother trying to set up a new array because the cause of the issue was detected drive faults, not actual RAID software config faults. This is just too typical of what Seagate HDD always were, and since I already happen to have two Western Digital Red Plus 8TB drives brand new just sitting nearby, I'm going to return these Seagates, get two more of the WDs, and profit from WDs legendary reliability and speed. Hell, the WD drives whose content I moved to this NAS are from 2013 and they're still going strong. As for the performance of these Seagates otherwise? Sure, they're about as fast as anything else while they work. But they do everything fast - including die. So I can't recommend. I just wonder how Seagate stays in business with lack of durability in their products like this.
NewEgg packaging SUCKS! My Drives arrived in a large box, the drives were individually packed in a plastic bubble sleeve that was not securely closed and the drives were bouncing around loose in the box with ZERO protection! The sleeves were simply laying in the box. The drives were obviously purchased in bulk but were not packaged properly. I have one that reported UNC error immediately, and all are being tested/scrubbed by my NAS to insure that they were not damaged in shipping. I purchased additional drives from another source that were packaged properly. This problem has caused me enough concern to consider carefully what I purchase from NewEgg in the future.