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The Western Digital 4TB Elements Desktop External Hard Drive offers massive storage with ultra-fast USB 3.0 connectivity. Designed for effortless plug-and-play use on both PC and Mac, it combines WD’s trusted reliability with a sleek, compact form factor—perfect for professionals who demand speed, capacity, and hassle-free expansion.
Hard Drive | 4 TB Portable |
Number of USB 3.0 Ports | 1 |
Brand | Western Digital |
Series | Elements Desktop |
Item model number | WDBWLG0040HBK-NESN |
Hardware Platform | PC;Mac |
Operating System | PC; Mac |
Item Weight | 4.8 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 5.3 x 1.9 x 6.5 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.3 x 1.9 x 6.5 inches |
Color | Black |
Flash Memory Size | 4 |
Hard Drive Interface | USB 3.0 |
Manufacturer | Western Digital Technologies, Inc. |
ASIN | B00ODEGWN8 |
Country of Origin | Thailand |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | August 30, 2017 |
M**R
inexpensive drives with good capacity, easy to make into RAID set
I've had four dual-drive RAID enclosures for RAID mirroring. I've never had a single drive in these enclosures to fail, but I've had several controller board failures and have ended up cannibalizing the drives for other purposes. I finally discovered (and should have known for years) that macOS can turn any two same-sized drives into a RAID 1 mirror array (or RAID 0, JBOD, or RAID 10). Two single desktop drives are considerably less expensive than buying a dual-drive unit, and if one goes bad they're cheap and easy to replace and rebuild.I bought two of these Elements 4TB desktop drives to make into a RAID 1 array for Time Machine on an iMac. I didn't want the MyBook drives because I didn't want the automatic encryption as a matter of simplicity and reliability. I needed a couple of more USB ports than I had and didn't want to bottleneck my USB 3 hub, so I bought an Anker USB-C to 4 port USB-A 3.0 adapter, since USB-C's bandwidth can absorb in one port anything these 2 drives can produce. Unboxed everything, plugged it in; fired up Disk Utility, formatted each drive for Mac, went to RAID Assistant, chose the drives I wanted, chose RAID 1 and sat back. Time from start to finish: about 15 minutes total, including plug-in time.So far this setup has worked flawlessly. These drives are cool and almost silent. Transfer rates are good, better than with the dual-drive enclosures. The price was excellent, far less than buying a dual-drive enclosure. We'll see how everything behaves over time. They have done Time Machine backups hourly for several years now without issues.Addendum: it's 2024 now, and the dual raid drives have performed flawlessly. I'm about to buy another one to back up my wife's photography and have chosen this drive again because of its reliability.
G**R
Plug and Play...Excellent
I am a WD fan from way back. I have two Home PC's and a WD Elements attachedto each machine; and they are very compatible with each PC. They are reliable, butnot very portable; home use only. The connectivity is wonderful; plug and play witheach unit pre-formatted. For security, there is a small on-off switch on the rear panel.These WD's are not meant to be dropped or banged around, but as a desktop device,the will give many years of good service.
S**H
Fast, even for small files; many other drives are extremely slow
I found out the hard way, while transferring gigabytes of photographs, that not all hard drives are fast for small files. Some of them slow to a crawl after transferring a few gigabytes of small files -- so much so that with these big drives, it can a very long time -- sometimes even days -- to transfer a bunch of files or back up a computer.Windows and Linux have utilities for measuring file transfer speed, and Mac probably does also. When I checked, I found to my horror that another major brand of 4 TB desktop backup drive that I just bought would start up fast, then slow down to a small fraction of its initial speed. All of my 3 1/2" portable drives and my USB Flash drives did the same! After checking the Internet, I bought this Western Digital 4TB Elements Desktop Hard Drive, WDBWLG0040HBK-NESN.The Western Digital works well, and I'm happy. It's quiet and reliable. Tested with Linux on 10 MiB file size ("small" files) it does slow down, but not excessively, as it proceeds. The average read and write rates are 146 MB/s and 148 MB/s, with a 16.5 msec access time. It's also fine with large files. Other drives I found tested several times slower with small files. I got similar results testing with Windows. For an economical drive like this, the performance is great, and it gets the job done.
F**O
Western Digital 4TB My Book Desktop External Hard Drive
It was exactly what I was looking for. Work good
A**J
GREAT external HDD. 2 year warranty, not 3 years
I got this WD external HDD (4 TB) to replace an aging and possibly failing Fantom Drive (2 TB). Transferring everything over (mostly my music) was quick and easy without problems. This new drive has plenty of room for additional files. Of note is the matter of warranty. It was advertised in several places on the Amazon site that this WD external HDD had a "3" year warranty. Having received my new drive, the box definitely says there is a "2" year warranty and there is paperwork inside making the same claim of a "2" year warranty. I have to admit the 3 year warranty was a selling point for me. Maybe Amazon should look into this matter.
D**N
Beast of a backup drive for the price!
For the price, this thing is a beast of a backup drive! $90 for 4TB (and yes, it REALLY is 4TB! more on that below...) and 200MB/s write speeds. That's tough to beat.For all the poor ratings because "you didn't get the space you paid for", look again 🙄 Data size/capacity is measured in two different ways. One is base 10 where 1000 bytes = 1kB, 1000kB = 1MB, etc. The other is base 2 where 1024 bytes = 1kB, 1024kB = 1MB, etc. (Actually, these 2 different measurements have different units/names which more explicitly clarify which base it uses but the market has decided to use the same units to represent both which, to be fair, is ambiguous and confusing).So this drive has a true capacity of 4 trillion bytes. In base 10, that can be represented as 4TB and be accurate. But your computer will report the capacity in base 2. 4 trillion bytes in base 2 comes out to ~3.63TB.Don't blame this drive for the confusing measurements. Every single HDD manufacturer now represents their disk capacity in this way. Blame the manufacturer who originally chose to use a purposely confusing and potentially misleading unit of measurement to perhaps make their drives appear larger than a competitors.
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