Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX
Original price was: $179.99.$114.99Current price is: $114.99.
Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX Price comparison
Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX Price History
Price History for WD - BLACK 4TB Gaming Internal Hard Drive
Statistics
Current Price | $114.99 | January 8, 2025 |
Highest Price | $139.99 | October 20, 2024 |
Lowest Price | $114.99 | November 24, 2024 |
Last price changes
$114.99 | November 24, 2024 |
$139.99 | October 20, 2024 |
Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX Description
- Desktop performance gaming hard drive.Data Transfer Rate:150Mbps.Specific uses: Personal, gaming, Business
- Performance storage available in up to 10TB* capacities | * As used for storage capacity, 1TB = one trillion bytes. Actual user capacity may be less depending on operating environment.
- Designed for gamers, system builders, and creative professionals.
- Western Digitalโs StableTrac and Dynamic Cache Technology increase reliability and optimize performance
- An industry-leading 5-year limited warranty** | ** See official Western Digital website for warranty details.
Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX Specification
Specification: Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX
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Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX Reviews (8)
8 reviews for Western Digital 4TB Black Performance Internal Hard Drive – WD4005FZBX
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Robert –
I like the reliability and the cache speed of this hard drive that I used for video files.
Even as SSD increase in capacity, its performance remains a good value.
qdeezie –
I am using this hard drive to play FLAC and WAV files on a KDlinks A400 media player. I consider myself to be something of an audiophile and I love good quality audio. The hard drive that I had been using prior to purchasing this WD Black was the Seagate Barracuda ST2000DM006 (A 2TB hard drive). The Seagate was solid and reliable for roughly two years and I had no complaints.
The reason I decided to upgrade to the WD Black 6TB hard was because it was specifically made for multimedia and I wanted to ensure I was futureproof with regards to available hard drive space, so I decided to splurge on the WD Black.
When I initially installed the hard drive in my A400, I was disappointed, because the sound was bright and shrill sounding. However, I heard all sorts of detail in my music that I never heard before and overall, the volume was louder as opposed to how the Seagate sounded, so I was a bit conflicted. I had to change the settings on my receiver (Pioneer SC-79) to try to remove that bright and shrill sound. There were a few factory settings on the receiver (Upsampling, Hi-bit32 are what I remember) that I had to turn off or to the lowest setting because they were processing the sound and making it sound artificial along with it sounding bright and shrill.
These changes made it sound better, but it was still bright and shrill. I was really disappointed in the WD Black, but I remembered that some electronics require a break in (especially for audio purposes), so instead of giving up and returning the hard drive I figured I’d keep it and hope that it would break in.
After about 90 days (not 90 days straight without shutting it off, but just playing it whenever I had time to listen to music or wanted music playing in the background), I noticed a magical thing.
One morning, I sat down and turned it on and I noticed for a few hours that I did not get up because my music was sounding especially good. My music was extremely clear, the music had excellent detail (far more than the Seagate) and the volume was louder than the Seagate. The sound coming out of my speakers was something I was not prepared for (in a good way).
I figured maybe I was just in some sort of a good mood and wanted to listen to music. Well, I made it a point to turn on my system for the next few days as time permitted and it sounded so much better (as opposed to Day 1) to the point of not wanting to get up and move on with my day.
Another observation I noticed after the break-in is that the music has a “darker background”. it’s hard to describe what I mean but think about it like this. If you know what “white noise” is in the background, this hard drive seems to deliver less of that sort of sound. You hear more of the artist and instrumentation.
It even made the difference between FLAC files and WAV files less pronounced. What I mean by this is that some albums I have ripped in both FLAC and WAV. WAV is the absolute best sound (between the two), but FLAC is close. it was far more noticeable on the Seagate drive, but less noticeable on this WD Black.
In closing this review, if anyone is buying this for audio purposes, I suggest exercising some patience with the break in and if you are using a receiver, turn off anything that is processing the sound (similar to what I mentioned above). The audio output from this hard drive is pure. Read the owners manual and find any audio processing settings that are turned on as a default. There may be some things you leave on and you may also have to do some EQ adjustments, bass, treble, etc. but the result is well worth it. Exercise some patience with your receiver and you will be rewarded. As for my A400, there are some settings on that for optimal audio output that I’ll be covering in my updated review on that whenever I get around to it. It is seriously a good piece for music.
I did NOT expect anything special from a higher end hard drive other than available storage space, but I have been pleasantly surprised and I no longer regret my purchase as I did on Day 1. I highly recommend this hard drive for audio purposes. in fact, I cannot recommend it enough.
Hope this helps with your purchase decision.
RobotCoffee –
Really nice performance drive for gaming, video editing or whatever else you still need a large capacity drive for and don’t want to shell out piles of money. I did a comparison between 4 drives I have – WD Black 4TB, WD Red 8TB, Seagate 4TB and WD Black SN750 lol the Black performs nicely, actually all of the drives do compared to Seagate but you really get what you pay for when it comes to Storage with the WD Black 4TB coming in at almost twice the price but entirely worth it in my opinion especially the warranty.
Western Digital recently replaced my external drive even though it had just exceeded the warranty period, was very nice of them, with a 5 year warranty I’m not at all worried about my data.
Amazon Customer –
Working good and fast.
RobotCoffee –
Really good drive. Bought alongside a new SSD to use as my storage drive. I could have gotten away with a slower drive for my purpose but I prefer the best. Spend the extra few bucks if you go the HDD route and just get this, you won’t regret it. It’s lightning fast for a HDD and very quiet.
To put it in comparison, it’s lightening fast compared to the 6 year old Seagate HDD I just replaced (starting to slow down and die) … but still nowhere near the speed of my new WD Blue SSD.
Mr. Roger H. Geyer –
I recently lost a PC, and am going through a technology upgrade cycle, and wanting to have data redundancy and convenient clones of hard drives to test under various scenarios (different PC’s, docks, cloning hardware and software, OS’s, etc.)
So, I recently bought four of these (One from Amazon, and three from another PC vendor). All four worked as expected right out of the box, taking nearly a 1 TB of Windows 7 OS and user data from other PC’s via various drive cloning processes, and then showing up as expected and letting me acess and update the data just fine.
The drives seem to run reasonably cool, and are fairly quiet (considering I’m running them in external open SATA docks for now), and the speed is fine. Just what I’d expect from a modern WD drive.
I don’t take chances with my data, so am happy to pay the premium for the WD black technology and reputation vs., say the WD blue. I can’t report on reliability/durability yet, since I’ve had these drives less than a week.
If I have problems worth noting, I’ll plan to post updates.
In my experience (from memory), over the past 20+ years, I’ve had a LOT of experience with roughly 30 WD drives. All consumer drives, size ranging from about a GB to 4 TB.
I’ve had only two problems. One was completely my fault. Back in the day when they sealed the drives with some kind of rubber gasket, I tore a small section of that removing a drive from a desktop case the first time. (Not a HW guy — didn’t know what I was doing). That drive crashed in a few days — which again was COMPLETELY my fault as air (with hair, dust, etc) got in there for awhile.
I had another drive start making noises and refusing to accept a full hard drive clone via Partition Magic version 8.X — probably in the early 2000’s. Again, not wanting to fool around with my data, I quit using that drive. The main reason I’ve stuck with WD is the drives seem to be very solid and perform consistently. I’ve use lots of both bare OEM and full retail kit WD drives, depending on prices/convenience.
Geniana d. –
O vendedor cancelou a compra por problema com o fornecedor, mas me manteve informada e prontamente providenciou um novo item, que chegou dentro do novo prazo. Talvez por isso, o hd chegou parecendo embalado ร s pressas sem proteรงรตes anti-impacto como deveria ser para esse tipo de produto e valor, mas com a embalagem antiestรกtica apropriada. O item em si รฉ original da WD, produto de excelรชncia como descrito no anรบncio, sem problemas em 3 meses de uso. Apenas nรฃo encontrei o tamanho do buffer alegado pelo fabricante, mesmo usando ferramentas como CrystalDiskInfo, Sentinel, Aida64 ou Sepeccy.
Alan OH –
Es fรกcil de colocar, trabaja muy bien el รบnico detalle es que es algo ruidoso, fuera de eso todo bien