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Seagate's IronWolf 110 SSD is designed for NAS, but can also be used in PCs. Thanks to very good performance, a high durability rating, and surprisingly low premium, you might just want to do that.
Seagate sees its new IronWolf 525 SSDs as the ideal fit for those who want the advantages Gen4 SSDs bring to the table over Gen3 but don't necessarily need an expensive hyper-class SSD.
It has been just over a year since the launch of Seagate's IronWolf 110 SSD. In that small amount of time, the market for AFA/NAS SSDs has expanded tremendously with Synology and Western Digital ...
In numbers, the 240GB IronWolf 110 SSD delivers 560MB/s and 55K IOPS when reading. When writing, it comes in at 345MB/s and 30K IOPS. Naturally, those numbers don’t come close to NVMe drives ...
Seagate is selling the IronWolf 110 2.5-inch SSD (Opens in a new window) in several capacities: 240GB, 480GB, 960GB, 1.9TB, and 3.8TB. They all feature a 6Gb/s SATA interface, ...
An IronWolf 510 SSD installed in a Synology DS1520+ (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Final verdict. Given the rock-bottom cost of NAND currently, due to a below-predicted consumption and improving ...
Seagate IronWolf 510 NVMe SSD While the IronWolf 510 can be used as a standalone M.2 NVMe drive for your data storage, it is more meant towards caching.
The IronWolf 510 SSD PCIe Gen3 x4, NVMe 1.3 is available in 240 GB, 480 GB, 960 GB, and 1.92 TB capacities and is compatible with leading NAS vendors.
The IronWolf’s write performance in AS SSD was 40MBps slower than the BarraCuda 10TB, but we’re still trying to understand the BarraCuda 12TB’s sudden drop in write speed.
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