At this time, Asustor, QNAP, QSAN, Synology, TerraMaster, and Thecus all support IronWolf Health. This is another piece of software for those using the company’s SSDs in a supported NAS. Then there is SeaTools SSD, which allows you to monitor your drive, update the firmware and more.Īdditionally, Seagate is working on offering IronWolf Health Management (IHM). Hopefully the company will fix this in an update soon. DiscWizard is Seagate’s locked-down version of Acronis True Image HD drive cloning software, but it doesn’t recognize the IronWolf 110 as a Seagate drive. SeaTools is a simple-to-use diagnostic tool that checks your drive’s health. Seagate offers a few downloads for the IronWolf 110, too. So, in the event your SSD were to fail within the plan’s time, you can send it out for recovery and hopefully get your data back. On top of the standard warranty, the IronWolf 110 SSD includes a complimentary 2-year Rescue Data Recovery Services plan. Performance suffers slightly on the 240GB and 480GB models, as per the norm, usually due to fewer NAND dies compared to the higher capacities. In terms of random performance, the company rates the SSD like an enterprise SSD - listing sustained performance, not peak like most consumer/prosumer drives The IronWolf 110 is rated to deliver 90,000/20,000 IOPS read/write. Seagate rates the IronWolf 110 NAS SSD to hit speeds upwards of 560/535 MBps read/write over it’s SATA III interface. Pricing is just as broad-ranging, from $79.99 all the way up to $749.99 for the 3.84TB model. Available in a broad range of capacities from 240GB all the way up to 3.84TB, Seagate’s IronWolf 110 can suit most capacity needs - depending in part on the size of your NAS enclosure.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |