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frontpage Posted by disc4tw • 2d ago
frontpage Posted by disc4tw • 2d ago

22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive

+ Free Shipping

$250

Amazon
39 Comments 14,708 Views
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QuickDealStore via Amazon has 22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive (STKP22000400) for $249.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member disc4tw for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • Easy-to-use desktop hard drive—simply plug in the power adapter and USB cable
  • Fast file transfers with USB 3.3
  • Drag-and-drop file saving right out of the box
  • Automatic recognition of Windows and Mac computers for simple setup (Reformatting required for use with Time Machine)
  • Enjoy peace of mind with the included limited warranty and Rescue Data Recovery Services

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff

Original Post

Written by disc4tw
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
QuickDealStore via Amazon has 22TB Seagate External USB 3.0 Expansion Desktop Hard Drive (STKP22000400) for $249.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member disc4tw for sharing this deal.

Features:
  • Easy-to-use desktop hard drive—simply plug in the power adapter and USB cable
  • Fast file transfers with USB 3.3
  • Drag-and-drop file saving right out of the box
  • Automatic recognition of Windows and Mac computers for simple setup (Reformatting required for use with Time Machine)
  • Enjoy peace of mind with the included limited warranty and Rescue Data Recovery Services

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff

Original Post

Written by disc4tw

Community Voting

Deal Score
+37
Good Deal
Get Deal at Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: Seagate Expansion 22TB External Hard Drive HDD - USB 3.0, with Rescue Data Recovery Services (STKP22000400)

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 6/6/2025, 01:00 PM
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Amazon$249.99
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Top Comments

If you have a fairly recent router that has a USB 3.0 port, you might be able to get away with just plugging the drive into that and configuring it to be shared over the network.
I had wondered the same thing, and now I have two 4 bay NAS enclosures plus 1 4 bay expansion with 2 8tb raid 1s, a 14tb raid 1, a 20tb raid 1 and a raid 10 w/ four 4tb drives. it is a slippery slope lol
It's hard to tell what's inside one these 20+ TB Seagate externals. The very early ones may have had Seagate Exos or Ironwolf in them, and those are great for shucking, but lately people have been finding Barracuda drives in them and the most I'll say is the jury is undecided on how reliable they might be. They typically are rated for far fewer work hours (mtbf) but since they're pretty new, who really knows. Personally, I avoid them because I don't want to find out. I instead will look at a recertified drive from serverpartdeals.

38 Comments

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2d ago
164 Posts
Joined Mar 2010

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

2d ago
86 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
2d ago
loganmjung
2d ago
86 Posts
I've been shopping for a large external HDD to backup my laptop, phone, and media. This seems like a great deal for the amount of storage, but I've also been considering a NAS. Would a NAS be overkill? I like the idea of not having to physically plug in my devices to backup and potentially have a network accessible drive of media, but I have no idea where to start. Any suggestions? Thanks!
2d ago
46 Posts
Joined Oct 2014
2d ago
gastonecrosse
2d ago
46 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank gastonecrosse

Quote from loganmjung :
I've been shopping for a large external HDD to backup my laptop, phone, and media. This seems like a great deal for the amount of storage, but I've also been considering a NAS. Would a NAS be overkill? I like the idea of not having to physically plug in my devices to backup and potentially have a network accessible drive of media, but I have no idea where to start. Any suggestions? Thanks!

I had wondered the same thing, and now I have two 4 bay NAS enclosures plus 1 4 bay expansion with 2 8tb raid 1s, a 14tb raid 1, a 20tb raid 1 and a raid 10 w/ four 4tb drives. it is a slippery slope lol
1
2
2d ago
16 Posts
Joined Dec 2021
2d ago
BeigeWinter369
2d ago
16 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank BeigeWinter369

Quote from loganmjung :
I've been shopping for a large external HDD to backup my laptop, phone, and media. This seems like a great deal for the amount of storage, but I've also been considering a NAS. Would a NAS be overkill? I like the idea of not having to physically plug in my devices to backup and potentially have a network accessible drive of media, but I have no idea where to start. Any suggestions? Thanks!
If you have a fairly recent router that has a USB 3.0 port, you might be able to get away with just plugging the drive into that and configuring it to be shared over the network.
3
2d ago
86 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
2d ago
loganmjung
2d ago
86 Posts
Quote from BeigeWinter369 :
If you have a fairly recent router that has a USB 3.0 port, you might be able to get away with just plugging the drive into that and configuring it to be shared over the network.
I didn't realize that was an option. I just had Google Fiber set up last month, which included a router.
2d ago
7,342 Posts
Joined Jul 2016
2d ago
Frank_Nitty
2d ago
7,342 Posts
Quote from Sanman99 :
Shuckable? Yes or noReliable drive? Or it's a Seagate...
Seagate's external HDDs usually are. It's WD's 2.5" external HDDs you have to worry a/b that aren't shuckable.
1
2d ago
164 Posts
Joined Mar 2010

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2d ago
93 Posts
Joined Feb 2018
2d ago
NervousLake876
2d ago
93 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank NervousLake876

Quote from Sanman99 :
Is it unreliable? Weren't there a certain line of Seagate that were maybe ok?

It's hard to tell what's inside one these 20+ TB Seagate externals. The very early ones may have had Seagate Exos or Ironwolf in them, and those are great for shucking, but lately people have been finding Barracuda drives in them and the most I'll say is the jury is undecided on how reliable they might be. They typically are rated for far fewer work hours (mtbf) but since they're pretty new, who really knows. Personally, I avoid them because I don't want to find out. I instead will look at a recertified drive from serverpartdeals.
1
2d ago
86 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
2d ago
loganmjung
2d ago
86 Posts
Quote from BeigeWinter369 :
If you have a fairly recent router that has a USB 3.0 port, you might be able to get away with just plugging the drive into that and configuring it to be shared over the network.
Just double checked and the router I was given (GFiber Wi-Fi 6E Router (GR6EXX0C)) has a Blue USB-A Port, which I believe is a 3.0). I have a 1TB external drive that I might test this out with before spending $250 on a 22TB model.
2d ago
164 Posts
Joined Mar 2010
2d ago
Sanman99
2d ago
164 Posts
Quote from NervousLake876 :
It's hard to tell what's inside one these 20+ TB Seagate externals. The very early ones may have had Seagate Exos or Ironwolf in them, and those are great for shucking, but lately people have been finding Barracuda drives in them and the most I'll say is the jury is undecided on how reliable they might be. They typically are rated for far fewer work hours (mtbf) but since they're pretty new, who really knows. Personally, I avoid them because I don't want to find out. I instead will look at a recertified drive from serverpartdeals.

Or GoHardDrives maybe. But prices seem to have gone up after some of their advertising campaigns. For both of these sellers.

For cold storage, I hope it's ok. But generally I'm guessing I'd just want something overall that I can use without worrying much either way. Unless I know it's strictly cold storage and then whether it's even safe for that.

Generally I just understand some drives are better. Not sure if they're all OK the same for cold storage. But generally I'd rather be assured than have half being iffy, unless I'm specifically speccing it for only cold storage.

Sound complicated, right? Rather get a good one.
1
2d ago
66 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
2d ago
moealza
2d ago
66 Posts
Can I use this and just connect it via USB to the mini-pc and have it host arr media?
2d ago
571 Posts
Joined Dec 2020
2d ago
Caffeineman
2d ago
571 Posts
Quote from gastonecrosse :
I had wondered the same thing, and now I have two 4 bay NAS enclosures plus 1 4 bay expansion with 2 8tb raid 1s, a 14tb raid 1, a 20tb raid 1 and a raid 10 w/ four 4tb drives. it is a slippery slope lol

The next step for you is building your own NAS.
2d ago
571 Posts
Joined Dec 2020
2d ago
Caffeineman
2d ago
571 Posts
Quote from moealza :
Can I use this and just connect it via USB to the mini-pc and have it host arr media?

Yes. I tested an old broken laptop with windows, with no screen or keyboard, hooked an external USB to it for testing.

About 10ish years later the "test" box has 3 externals hanging off of it and outlasted a round I went with Linux on server hardware. (My fault, I ran out of OS storage and didn't know how to fix).

Going round 2. Proxmox on bare metal and Linux VMs.

edit. it is so much more reliable then the Hulu plus subscription that I pay for. last week we had to uninstall Hulu and install Hulu three different times and the third time we couldn't get Hulu working at all pretty soon I'm not going to be paying Hulu.
Last edited by Caffeineman June 4, 2025 at 01:33 PM.
2d ago
86 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
2d ago
loganmjung
2d ago
86 Posts
Quote from gastonecrosse :
I had wondered the same thing, and now I have two 4 bay NAS enclosures plus 1 4 bay expansion with 2 8tb raid 1s, a 14tb raid 1, a 20tb raid 1 and a raid 10 w/ four 4tb drives. it is a slippery slope lol
Any recommendations on a simple NAS setup? Rather than upgrading my router, which doesn't offer external storage, I'd rather go the NAS setup route.

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2d ago
1,130 Posts
Joined Feb 2005
2d ago
rb5505
2d ago
1,130 Posts
Quote from gastonecrosse :
I had wondered the same thing, and now I have two 4 bay NAS enclosures plus 1 4 bay expansion with 2 8tb raid 1s, a 14tb raid 1, a 20tb raid 1 and a raid 10 w/ four 4tb drives. it is a slippery slope lol
these type of notes are endless. it's the new crack, and that is not funny.

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