Samsung was well known to build quiet drives that consume less power than most other HDDs - but I don't know if this is still valid for their current products.Akkara wrote: Are there models of hard-disks that use less power and that are also reliable?

It does. Most of the power is used to keep the disk spinning at the required speed, at least when idle.eccerr0r wrote:All in all I don't think hard drive power consumption nowadays vary much, as if hard drive speed dictates power consumption.
Some people already had that idea... look at that thing.eccerr0r wrote:Almost seems the only solution is to just get a farm of laptop hard drives...
Those already exist. They use an SAS interface (SCSI protocol over an SATA-like electrical interface), and run at 10k rpm, just like the regular 3.5" SCSI drives.Cyker wrote:Then again if this becomes popular, maybe we'll see enterprise-grade 2.5" drives
it can be hard to monitor usage per drive, but you can monitor system usage with a UPS if your board doesn't have any power monitoring features. It doesn't exactly tell you the drive usage but you can get an idea for what things affect it when you swap parts. A kill a watt or similar power meter can also help but something like a UPS allows you to connect it to a monitoring setup and track stats betterC5ace wrote:I use 5 x 2TB WD 3.5" 7200rpm SATA 6Gb/s Black Edition HDD PN WD2003FZEX as RAID 5 in a 12x7h on workstation. 4 drives are 4 years old. 1 drive was 8 years old when it died. Replaced by a 4tb 4TB WD 3.5" 7200rpm SATA 6Gb/s Black HDD. Usual operating drive temperature is about 45C. Power consumption of the drives are unknown.
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Average power requirements (W) 2TB
Read/Write 9.5
Idle 8.1
Standby and Sleep 1.3
Average power requirements (W) 4TB
Read/Write 9.1
Idle 5.8
Standby and Sleep 1.0