Ask HN: Do you know why new high-capacity WD drives make this weird noise?
I recently bought two 8TB WD Gold drives, and they happen to be the noisiest drives I've heard in about 20 years. However the weirdest aspect of it is that they make a sound like a floppy drive regularly when not under load. There's a huge thread on the WD forum with other people experiencing this across multiple ranges and sizes: https://community.wd.com/t/strange-noise-coming-from-10tb-drives-wd100efax/226467/240
This audio clip captures the type of sound: https://clyp.it/ltzgugcu
~260 posts and 2 years in, nobody has a clue what it is and WD won't explain it either. The common factors seem to be running them in a software RAID on home servers. It's weird and it's quite irritating, so does anyone on HN have any ideas?
I bought Gold drives so I wasn't expecting silence, but this seems to be prevalent across the Red Pro and Red range too.
5 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 26.6 ms ] threadSounds like something is moving mixed with case vibration. I can only guess it is the arm which moves across the platters. Are you using zfs, mdm? Maybr the raid is at work.
I bought a small factor pc recently which is a little noisy. I rest it on sponge pad. I also discovered setting a speaker on a specific spot much reduces the noise.
I look forward to hearing the cause of your problem.
It's such a weird sound for a modern drive to make - it's like a printer spooling paper mixed with a floppy drive. One suggestion on the thread was that the disk was doing some sort of lifespan optimisation when idling, which might make sense, as it never makes the noise when under load.
Mine are even louder than that clip above, I can actually hear it across a room. Guess I'll be sound insulating a data cabinet to cut it down a bit!
I initially thought part of the issue might be due to the drives being mounted directly to the case so I bought a set of anti-vibration rubber drive mounts, but it didn't help at all.
I've used primarily WD drives for years but I think my next pair will be from a different manufacturer and will likely replace these golds, which can be relegated to a second machine in my shed where I can't hear them.
I've had this problem with my Seagate Exos X 14TB. In the end I've disabled the idle2 timer, which is resposible to park the head after 2m of inactivity. This resulted in 1000 load cycles just after I had the disk for 100h somehow.