Toshiba N300 16TB 3.5" Internal Hard Drive
Toshiba's N300 3.5-inch NAS internal hard drive is designed to meet the reliability, performance, endurance, and scalability requirements of 24/7 network attached storage application for personal, home office and small business use. The N300 delivers up to 16TB of storage capacity and provides up to 1,200,000 hour MTTF and designed for 24/7 power-on operation. This drive features rotational vibration (RV) sensors which automatically detect and compensate for transient vibrations to deliver consistent performance in multi-bay storage enclosures. With support for up to 8 drive bays in a multi-RAID NAS design, the N300 is highly scalable to the users' NAS configurations as their data storage needs evolve. The N300 NAS HDD line of high-reliability drives have a high workload rating of up to 180TB/year and are optimized for use in NAS environments where large amounts of data need to be efficiently stored and accessed daily.
Toshiba's N300 3.5-inch NAS internal hard drive is designed to meet the reliability, performance, endurance, and scalability requirements of 24/7 network attached storage application for personal, home office and small business use. The N300 delivers up to 16TB of storage capacity and provides up to 1,200,000 hour MTTF and designed for 24/7 power-on operation. This drive features rotational vibration (RV) sensors which automatically detect and compensate for transient vibrations to deliver consistent performance in multi-bay storage enclosures. With support for up to 8 drive bays in a multi-RAID NAS design, the N300 is highly scalable to the users' NAS configurations as their data storage needs evolve. The N300 NAS HDD line of high-reliability drives have a high workload rating of up to 180TB/year and are optimized for use in NAS environments where large amounts of data need to be efficiently stored and accessed daily.
Toshiba's N300 3.5-inch NAS internal hard drive is designed to meet the reliability, performance, endurance, and scalability requirements of 24/7 network attached storage application for personal, home office and small business use. The N300 delivers up to 16TB of storage capacity and provides up to 1,200,000 hour MTTF and designed for 24/7 power-on operation. This drive features rotational vibration (RV) sensors which automatically detect and compensate for transient vibrations to deliver consistent performance in multi-bay storage enclosures. With support for up to 8 drive bays in a multi-RAID NAS design, the N300 is highly scalable to the users' NAS configurations as their data storage needs evolve. The N300 NAS HDD line of high-reliability drives have a high workload rating of up to 180TB/year and are optimized for use in NAS environments where large amounts of data need to be efficiently stored and accessed daily.
Toshiba's N300 3.5-inch NAS internal hard drive is designed to meet the reliability, performance, endurance, and scalability requirements of 24/7 network attached storage application for personal, home office and small business use. The N300 delivers up to 16TB of storage capacity and provides up to 1,200,000 hour MTTF and designed for 24/7 power-on operation. This drive features rotational vibration (RV) sensors which automatically detect and compensate for transient vibrations to deliver consistent performance in multi-bay storage enclosures. With support for up to 8 drive bays in a multi-RAID NAS design, the N300 is highly scalable to the users' NAS configurations as their data storage needs evolve. The N300 NAS HDD line of high-reliability drives have a high workload rating of up to 180TB/year and are optimized for use in NAS environments where large amounts of data need to be efficiently stored and accessed daily.
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The lowest price for Toshiba N300 16TB 3.5" Internal Hard Drive right now is $288.70 at jakelectronics.com, compared across 13 retailers.
The all-time low was $286.73 on 9 June 2026 — today's price is 1% above the lowest ever. This is at or near its all-time low — a good time to buy.
Prices last updated 10 June 2026.
Last updated at 10/06/2026 10:33:50
Toshiba 10TB N300 NAS Internal HDD - 3.5" SATA-3 512MB Cache 6GB/s 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive 7/24 NAS Unit Server and Security Disk (MN10ADA10TS)
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originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
I got this drive for media storage. It only has about 700 gigs on it and the read speeds have gotten so low that it has rendered it practically useless. No, my sata lanes are not throttled; I can hook up a 1tb WD on the same port/cable and get over 200 mb/s every time, and I have tried hooking the Toshiba up to every other sata port I have on 3 separate pc's as well as my friend's pc, none of which have changed the read speeds. Eventually I decided to short stroke this hdd into 3 partitions as a last resort hail mary before sending it in for warranty. That has gotten my first partition of 600gb to read/write around 100 mb/s with the other two 1.5tb partitions severely degrading in performance the closer it gets to the platter's middle. It's usable now anyway, that's ... MoreI got this drive for media storage. It only has about 700 gigs on it and the read speeds have gotten so low that it has rendered it practically useless. No, my sata lanes are not throttled; I can hook up a 1tb WD on the same port/cable and get over 200 mb/s every time, and I have tried hooking the Toshiba up to every other sata port I have on 3 separate pc's as well as my friend's pc, none of which have changed the read speeds. Eventually I decided to short stroke this hdd into 3 partitions as a last resort hail mary before sending it in for warranty. That has gotten my first partition of 600gb to read/write around 100 mb/s with the other two 1.5tb partitions severely degrading in performance the closer it gets to the platter's middle. It's usable now anyway, that's about the best I can say for it. The first 600 gigs benchmark at 180 mb/s but even when it's short stroked I still get nowhere near those speeds, and even at it's best performance on the short stroke it is still 60 mb/s away from advertised speeds. I have only ever used Western Digital hdd's over my 30+ years of pc'ing, and this is exactly why. Stay far away from this drive. It's a 4 tb drive with only 600 gigs that are actually usable. Pathetic. I'll be sending it in for warranty, but from what I have read, Toshiba's warranty department is flat out garbage and they don't actually send you a new drive, just a check for your purchase price. So if you get this drive on sale, you are doomed. Stay away.
originally posted on newegg.com
It's been awhile since I've had a platter drive arrive by carrier, the packaging is interesting. Robust box containing the drive which is encapsulated in a very rigid almost bubble wrap (more robust and bigger air bubbles) sleeping bag, the drive certainly would survive the roughest of UPS/FedEx journeys. I've never had a Toshiba spinning HDD before, I do have a few of their SSD products and they perform very well. I used this drive to replace a couple of Seagate 4TB drives (ST4000DM 000-1F2168) I have in a 16TB array. The response of this drive and its throughput was definitely more than a match for my existing drives, the increase in platter speed of 7200 vs 5900 was very evident. Temperatures remained remarkably low, my Seagates get quite hot in their housing at ... MoreIt's been awhile since I've had a platter drive arrive by carrier, the packaging is interesting. Robust box containing the drive which is encapsulated in a very rigid almost bubble wrap (more robust and bigger air bubbles) sleeping bag, the drive certainly would survive the roughest of UPS/FedEx journeys. I've never had a Toshiba spinning HDD before, I do have a few of their SSD products and they perform very well. I used this drive to replace a couple of Seagate 4TB drives (ST4000DM 000-1F2168) I have in a 16TB array. The response of this drive and its throughput was definitely more than a match for my existing drives, the increase in platter speed of 7200 vs 5900 was very evident. Temperatures remained remarkably low, my Seagates get quite hot in their housing at this time of year (summer). However, even after a 24 hour copying marathon, it takes a long time to copy 7.2 TB of mixed data, the Toshiba drive was warm but not hot. I foresee that I will replace the other 2x 4 TB at some point in the future as my storage requirements increase and then another two to fill the empty slots, so another 3 x 8TB giving 32TB in total. This array is mirrored so at some point in my future I hope to be financially secure enough to buy 7 of these in total. I suspect I will be buying them in singly. I lost a 500GB drive a number of years ago and I swore I would never not have a mirrored backup again. Based on performance, running temperatures, warranty and Toshiba's proven track record in HDD/SSD this drive deserves 5 eggs.
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
I bought this HDD for my NAS server. Typically I have always used enterprise level drives such as Ultrastar 7k4000 but I saw this Toshiba N300 on sale and well, you get what you pay for. I installed this drive in my server, booted it up, and after resilvering the RAID setup it worked great for about an hour. Now i get SMART fail tests every 30 minutes (see below) : Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 Seek_Error_Rate. Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 ... MoreI bought this HDD for my NAS server. Typically I have always used enterprise level drives such as Ultrastar 7k4000 but I saw this Toshiba N300 on sale and well, you get what you pay for. I installed this drive in my server, booted it up, and after resilvering the RAID setup it worked great for about an hour. Now i get SMART fail tests every 30 minutes (see below) : Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 Seek_Error_Rate. Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 Seek_Error_Rate. I don't know how I can get a replacement from Toshiba, but I read somewhere that this specific batch (July 2021) had a faulty motherboard so my guess is they dumped it on 3rd parties like Newegg to unload it for a cheap price. Thanks Toshiba!
| General | |
| Device Type | Hard drive - internal |
| Capacity | 16 TB |
| Form Factor | 3.5" |
| Interface | SATA 6Gb/s |
Toshiba 10TB N300 NAS Internal HDD - 3.5" SATA-3 512MB Cache 6GB/s 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive 7/24 NAS Unit Server and Security Disk (MN10ADA10TS)
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!
Toshiba HDWG460XZSTA
Delivery between Thu – Tue $71.34
Toshiba HDWG21CXZSTA
Delivery between Thu – Tue $71.34
Toshiba HDWG31GXZSTA
Delivery between Thu – Tue $71.34
Toshiba HDWG460XZSTA Embedded Computers
Delivery between Thu – Tue $57.07
I got this drive for media storage. It only has about 700 gigs on it and the read speeds have gotten so low that it has rendered it practically useless. No, my sata lanes are not throttled; I can hook up a 1tb WD on the same port/cable and get over 200 mb/s every time, and I have tried hooking the Toshiba up to every other sata port I have on 3 separate pc's as well as my friend's pc, none of which have changed the read speeds. Eventually I decided to short stroke this hdd into 3 partitions as a last resort hail mary before sending it in for warranty. That has gotten my first partition of 600gb to read/write around 100 mb/s with the other two 1.5tb partitions severely degrading in performance the closer it gets to the platter's middle. It's usable now anyway, that's ... MoreI got this drive for media storage. It only has about 700 gigs on it and the read speeds have gotten so low that it has rendered it practically useless. No, my sata lanes are not throttled; I can hook up a 1tb WD on the same port/cable and get over 200 mb/s every time, and I have tried hooking the Toshiba up to every other sata port I have on 3 separate pc's as well as my friend's pc, none of which have changed the read speeds. Eventually I decided to short stroke this hdd into 3 partitions as a last resort hail mary before sending it in for warranty. That has gotten my first partition of 600gb to read/write around 100 mb/s with the other two 1.5tb partitions severely degrading in performance the closer it gets to the platter's middle. It's usable now anyway, that's about the best I can say for it. The first 600 gigs benchmark at 180 mb/s but even when it's short stroked I still get nowhere near those speeds, and even at it's best performance on the short stroke it is still 60 mb/s away from advertised speeds. I have only ever used Western Digital hdd's over my 30+ years of pc'ing, and this is exactly why. Stay far away from this drive. It's a 4 tb drive with only 600 gigs that are actually usable. Pathetic. I'll be sending it in for warranty, but from what I have read, Toshiba's warranty department is flat out garbage and they don't actually send you a new drive, just a check for your purchase price. So if you get this drive on sale, you are doomed. Stay away.
It's been awhile since I've had a platter drive arrive by carrier, the packaging is interesting. Robust box containing the drive which is encapsulated in a very rigid almost bubble wrap (more robust and bigger air bubbles) sleeping bag, the drive certainly would survive the roughest of UPS/FedEx journeys. I've never had a Toshiba spinning HDD before, I do have a few of their SSD products and they perform very well. I used this drive to replace a couple of Seagate 4TB drives (ST4000DM 000-1F2168) I have in a 16TB array. The response of this drive and its throughput was definitely more than a match for my existing drives, the increase in platter speed of 7200 vs 5900 was very evident. Temperatures remained remarkably low, my Seagates get quite hot in their housing at ... MoreIt's been awhile since I've had a platter drive arrive by carrier, the packaging is interesting. Robust box containing the drive which is encapsulated in a very rigid almost bubble wrap (more robust and bigger air bubbles) sleeping bag, the drive certainly would survive the roughest of UPS/FedEx journeys. I've never had a Toshiba spinning HDD before, I do have a few of their SSD products and they perform very well. I used this drive to replace a couple of Seagate 4TB drives (ST4000DM 000-1F2168) I have in a 16TB array. The response of this drive and its throughput was definitely more than a match for my existing drives, the increase in platter speed of 7200 vs 5900 was very evident. Temperatures remained remarkably low, my Seagates get quite hot in their housing at this time of year (summer). However, even after a 24 hour copying marathon, it takes a long time to copy 7.2 TB of mixed data, the Toshiba drive was warm but not hot. I foresee that I will replace the other 2x 4 TB at some point in the future as my storage requirements increase and then another two to fill the empty slots, so another 3 x 8TB giving 32TB in total. This array is mirrored so at some point in my future I hope to be financially secure enough to buy 7 of these in total. I suspect I will be buying them in singly. I lost a 500GB drive a number of years ago and I swore I would never not have a mirrored backup again. Based on performance, running temperatures, warranty and Toshiba's proven track record in HDD/SSD this drive deserves 5 eggs.
I bought this HDD for my NAS server. Typically I have always used enterprise level drives such as Ultrastar 7k4000 but I saw this Toshiba N300 on sale and well, you get what you pay for. I installed this drive in my server, booted it up, and after resilvering the RAID setup it worked great for about an hour. Now i get SMART fail tests every 30 minutes (see below) : Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 Seek_Error_Rate. Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 ... MoreI bought this HDD for my NAS server. Typically I have always used enterprise level drives such as Ultrastar 7k4000 but I saw this Toshiba N300 on sale and well, you get what you pay for. I installed this drive in my server, booted it up, and after resilvering the RAID setup it worked great for about an hour. Now i get SMART fail tests every 30 minutes (see below) : Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 20:36:24 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 Seek_Error_Rate. Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, FAILED SMART self-check. BACK UP DATA NOW! Apr 6 21:06:23 NASSRVR01 smartd[2086]: Device: /dev/ada0, Failed SMART usage Attribute: 7 Seek_Error_Rate. I don't know how I can get a replacement from Toshiba, but I read somewhere that this specific batch (July 2021) had a faulty motherboard so my guess is they dumped it on 3rd parties like Newegg to unload it for a cheap price. Thanks Toshiba!
I had a WD RED go bad in my NAS drive and rather than replacing the one drive decided to upgrade all to these 7200RPM (over 5400RPM) drives to obtain some faster speeds.Was a little apprehensive with potential noise, but there was no significant audible increase except in spinning up. Once up to speed was as quiet as anything I have tried in the QNAP NAS.So far have had zero issues, rebuilt my RAID on these like 5 times (each rebuild was faster than with WD RED for sure by a couple of hours).All in all, happy with my purchase and, on sale, they were a steal.
Let's start with some numbers obtained from CrystalDiskMark 3.0.4 running a 4000MB test size. While empty the drive achieved sequential read and write speeds of 206MB/s and 205MB/s respectively and 4K speeds of 0.75MB/s and 1.75MB/s. With about 1.7TB of data on it the sequential speeds dropped to 182MB/s read and 180MB/s write and the 4K speeds dropped to 0.51MB/s and 1.58MB/s. For a spinning drive, the sequential speeds are good and the 4K speeds are to be expected. These Toshiba drives (the N300 and X300) differentiate themselves from the competitors in one major way, price. These drives are significantly cheaper while still offering similar performance and features. The only area these drives fall behind in is the warranty. This N300 only has a 3 year warranty ... MoreLet's start with some numbers obtained from CrystalDiskMark 3.0.4 running a 4000MB test size. While empty the drive achieved sequential read and write speeds of 206MB/s and 205MB/s respectively and 4K speeds of 0.75MB/s and 1.75MB/s. With about 1.7TB of data on it the sequential speeds dropped to 182MB/s read and 180MB/s write and the 4K speeds dropped to 0.51MB/s and 1.58MB/s. For a spinning drive, the sequential speeds are good and the 4K speeds are to be expected. These Toshiba drives (the N300 and X300) differentiate themselves from the competitors in one major way, price. These drives are significantly cheaper while still offering similar performance and features. The only area these drives fall behind in is the warranty. This N300 only has a 3 year warranty while the higher priced competition has a 5 year warranty. In my opinion, the increase in price is not worth the extra length of warranty. One other thing I have noticed about this drive is that it is a little louder and a little hotter than other drives. When benchmarking and transferring large amounts of data, the HDD is noticeably audible. In terms of heat, I have noticed this drive operating about 3°C warmer than other drives in the same cage. While these things are minor and relatively insignificant on a single drive, many drives together in an array could stack the effects and have a significant impact. Overall, this is a good drive for mass storage in any device at a good price. While it is targeted towards NAS with a continuous use rating, it would work just fine as a standard HDD in just about anything. And in regards to the "RAID support" marketing, I have yet to find a HDD that did not work with RAID.
I am using this hard drive as a primary desktop drive (EXT4 format) running Mageia Linux. The HDWQ140 replaced a PATA Seagate Barracuda ST3500630A, so any comparisons I make are relative to that hard drive. The Toshiba is fast: cold boot times (from power-on to desktop login) have gone from roughly 1 minute 15 seconds to about 25 seconds. Three runs of hdparm -Ttv yielded speeds of around 200MB/sec, in line with what Toshiba reports, so I have no issues with the drive's speed. The HDWQ140's sounds are pitched higher than my old ST3500630A's. When reading/writing, the Toshiba makes a "chir-chir" sound whereas the ST3500630A made more of a "dut-dut" sound. That being said, I do not find these sounds unpleasant, but they are audible. In my particular setup, the major ... MoreI am using this hard drive as a primary desktop drive (EXT4 format) running Mageia Linux. The HDWQ140 replaced a PATA Seagate Barracuda ST3500630A, so any comparisons I make are relative to that hard drive. The Toshiba is fast: cold boot times (from power-on to desktop login) have gone from roughly 1 minute 15 seconds to about 25 seconds. Three runs of hdparm -Ttv yielded speeds of around 200MB/sec, in line with what Toshiba reports, so I have no issues with the drive's speed. The HDWQ140's sounds are pitched higher than my old ST3500630A's. When reading/writing, the Toshiba makes a "chir-chir" sound whereas the ST3500630A made more of a "dut-dut" sound. That being said, I do not find these sounds unpleasant, but they are audible. In my particular setup, the major annoyance is a slight "hiccup" every five seconds or so, which I think is a read/write of minimal data, but I do not think this is the fault of the drive; my guess is that either the OS or the programs I am using (or both) are to blame. Toshiba packages the hard drive in a plastic bag (which did not appear to be an anti-static one) and fits it snugly into a 2-piece "sleeve" that has multiple plastic air cushions, so it does seem as if there is no way for it to move around inside the box. There are no SATA cables or screws, so make sure you pick some up elsewhere.
So it is still soon I guess, but they are fine, they are running 2x2 in RAID 0 and they are doing fine so far. I have a 2.5Gbps link to that storage box, and it is fully used when transferring files to them. However, at first when I hydrated the first 2x4tb raid 0 volume, they were a little noisy, but now is fine. I will get another set.
My 6Tb drives within my old QNAP TS-670 Pro had long lasted way past their lifespan but started to fail one by one. As I could not find any drives that the NAS would support I looked into the QNAP compatibility list and discovered that the latest firmware supports 12Tb drives (costs far too much) so the Toshiba N300 was listed and they are now installed and working mush better than the 6TB did. These should last for another 15 years
This drive is marketed as a NAS drive, mainly for data backup as that’s what most NAS systems are for. Along those lines, the drive is also marketed as a highly reliable drive, something NAS owners value in a hard drive. Let me just say that over the last 30 years of working with and building PCs, Toshiba drives have impressed me the most for their reliability strengths. When my Western Digitals and Seagates have reliably failed me, my Toshiba drives have always come through. In fact, I have never had a Toshiba drive fail on me, so as far as reliability from my point of view, the name alone is marketing enough. Installing this drive was as easy as any other drive, quickly recognized by my bios and properly formatted. Most of my testing was using the drive directly ... MoreThis drive is marketed as a NAS drive, mainly for data backup as that’s what most NAS systems are for. Along those lines, the drive is also marketed as a highly reliable drive, something NAS owners value in a hard drive. Let me just say that over the last 30 years of working with and building PCs, Toshiba drives have impressed me the most for their reliability strengths. When my Western Digitals and Seagates have reliably failed me, my Toshiba drives have always come through. In fact, I have never had a Toshiba drive fail on me, so as far as reliability from my point of view, the name alone is marketing enough. Installing this drive was as easy as any other drive, quickly recognized by my bios and properly formatted. Most of my testing was using the drive directly through my motherboard. I do have a NAS device that I installed the drive into, and as expected, it worked just fine. Speeds were close enough to the advertised numbers to make me happy, and as far as other points of performance, heat, noise, spin-up, etc. all were easily within industry norms. Some reviews say it is noisy, but I think that the noise that it does make is just at a more noticeable pitch and not necessarily louder. It’s not a big enough issue to consider in my opinion. Using this drive as a system’s main C drive would work fine, although I am a big believer of SSD’s for that purpose. Its 4 terabyte capacity at its current price point is very nice. It comes with a 3 year warranty, though I wouldn’t expect I’d have to use it. Small things like the location of mounting screw holes were accurate and ample. The cables fit tightly and the drive is simple and elegant in the way it looks. I would recommend this drive for any common application and I think it would be a really good drive for using in your Network Attached Storage system, eight of them in fact.
Drive ran for a few days before failing with total data loss. I didn’t check to see if this was a Zero hours drive or not. I suspect it wasn’t even though it was purchased as new. I believe there is an app that lets you check.Packaging it arrived in wasn't great either.I have other Toshiba N300 drive that have been fine so I’m hoping a replacement will do the trick.
| General | |
| Device Type | Hard drive - internal |
| Capacity | 16 TB |
| Form Factor | 3.5" |
| Interface | SATA 6Gb/s |