NAS Hard Drive
7200 RPM — CMR
Up to 8-Bay RAID Systems
Purpose-built for always-on NAS environments — 12TB, 7200 RPM, 512MB cache, CMR recording, and NASware 3.0 technology for reliable 24/7 operation in RAID-optimized storage systems.
The WD Red Plus (WD120EFGX) is a 3.5-inch SATA NAS hard drive engineered for the continuous read/write demands of home and small-to-medium business NAS systems. Where desktop drives fail under always-on shared storage workloads, the WD Red Plus is designed from the ground up for exactly this environment — running 24/7 in RAID-powered enclosures, handling simultaneous access from multiple users, and surviving the vibration and thermal conditions of multi-drive NAS bays. At 12TB with 7200 RPM speed, a 512MB cache, and CMR recording technology, it is one of the most capable drives in the mainstream NAS category.
Available at ITFactory.ca — Canada's trusted source for NAS storage and network components.
|
Why NAS Drives Are Not Interchangeable with Desktop Drives
Desktop hard drives are engineered for single-user, intermittent workloads — they are not designed to run continuously in a RAID array, handle simultaneous network requests from multiple users, or tolerate the vibration generated by neighbouring drives in a multi-bay enclosure. When a desktop drive encounters a read error in a RAID environment, it may spend too long attempting recovery — causing the RAID controller to drop the drive from the array, resulting in data loss.
The WD Red Plus addresses all of this: TLER (Time-Limited Error Recovery) caps the error recovery window so the RAID controller stays informed, NASware 3.0 optimizes firmware parameters for NAS workloads, and the drive is stress-tested for 24/7 operation in up to 8-bay enclosures. Using a desktop drive in a NAS is a false economy that typically ends in premature failure or RAID degradation.
|
Key Features
|
NASware 3.0 Technology WD's proprietary NASware 3.0 firmware fine-tunes drive parameters specifically for NAS workloads — improving compatibility with NAS enclosures, optimizing RAID rebuild efficiency, and enhancing overall system reliability during simultaneous multi-user access.
|
TLER — RAID Error Recovery Control Time-Limited Error Recovery caps the time the drive spends attempting to recover from a read error, ensuring the RAID controller is kept informed and the array stays healthy. This is the critical difference between NAS drives and desktop drives in RAID environments.
|
|
7200 RPM — Faster Than Most NAS Drives Higher platter speed delivers up to 260 MB/s sustained transfer rates — faster than the 5400 RPM WD Red and comparable to enterprise drives. Essential for NAS systems handling large file transfers, 4K media streaming, or multiple simultaneous users.
|
CMR Recording Technology Conventional Magnetic Recording delivers consistent, reliable write performance — critical for RAID rebuilds and write-intensive NAS workloads. Unlike SMR drives, CMR has no write performance penalties during random write operations or RAID array rebuilding.
|
|
512MB Cache A large 512MB buffer improves performance during simultaneous read/write operations from multiple network users — reducing latency when several devices access the NAS concurrently for media streaming, file sharing, and backups.
|
180 TB/Year Workload Rating Rated for three times the annual workload of a typical desktop drive — covering the continuous read/write demands of always-on NAS systems handling multiple users, automated backups, media serving, and surveillance footage.
|
|
Rotational Vibration (RV) Sensors Built-in RV sensors detect and compensate for vibration from adjacent spinning drives in multi-bay NAS enclosures — maintaining read/write accuracy and performance in 4, 6, and 8-bay systems where multiple drives operate simultaneously.
|
1 Million Hours MTBF Mean Time Between Failures of 1 million hours reflects the drive's engineering for sustained, always-on operation — providing confidence in long-term reliability for NAS systems that run continuously without scheduled downtime.
|
|
Ideal for ZFS, RAID 0/1/5/6 and JBOD Optimized for all common NAS RAID configurations and ZFS file systems used by Synology, QNAP, and other major NAS brands. TLER and NASware 3.0 together ensure smooth RAID rebuild operations that are often the most demanding moment in a drive's life.
|
Broad NAS Compatibility Tested and validated with major NAS brands including Synology, QNAP, Asustor, and others. Western Digital maintains an active compatibility list updated with new NAS models — check wdc.com for your specific enclosure before purchase.
|
|
Dual-Plane Balance Control Reduces vibration and noise during operation — important in home and office environments where NAS systems run continuously near workspaces or living areas. Quieter operation without sacrificing performance.
|
3-Year Limited Warranty Backed by WD's 3-year limited warranty covering the drive against manufacturing defects during its rated service life in NAS environments.
|
Who Is This For?
The WD Red Plus 12TB is the right drive for home power users and small-to-medium businesses running a NAS for file sharing, media streaming, backup storage, and general network storage — in systems with up to 8 drive bays. The 7200 RPM speed makes it particularly well suited for media-intensive NAS builds and multi-user business environments where faster throughput matters.
Home and SOHO NAS builds
Small to mid-size business file servers
4K media streaming and Plex servers
Synology and QNAP enclosures
Backup and archive storage systems
RAID 0, 1, 5, 6, and ZFS arrays
Technical Specifications
| Brand |
Western Digital (WD) |
| Model |
WD Red Plus NAS Hard Drive |
| Part Number |
WD120EFGX |
| Drive Type |
HDD (Hard Disk Drive) — 3.5 inch |
| Capacity |
12TB |
| Interface |
SATA III (6 Gb/s) |
| Rotation Speed |
7200 RPM |
| Cache |
512 MB |
| Max Sequential Transfer |
Up to 260 MB/s |
| Recording Technology |
CMR (Conventional Magnetic Recording) |
| Workload Rating |
180 TB/year |
| NAS Bay Support |
Up to 8 bays |
| RAID Support |
RAID 0, 1, 5, 6, JBOD, ZFS |
| Error Recovery |
TLER (Time-Limited Error Recovery) |
| NAS Firmware |
NASware 3.0 |
| RV Sensors |
Yes — rotational vibration compensation |
| MTBF |
1,000,000 hours |
| Load/Unload Cycles |
600,000 |
| Non-Recoverable Read Errors |
<1 in 10¹⁴ bits read |
| Operating Temperature |
0°C to 65°C |
| Compatibility |
Synology, QNAP, Asustor, and major NAS brands |
| Warranty |
3-year limited warranty |
| Sold by |
ITFactory.ca — Canadian authorized WD reseller |
Why Buy from ITFactory.ca?
ITFactory.ca is a trusted Canadian retailer for NAS storage and network components, serving home users, IT professionals, and businesses across the country. Every product we sell is genuine and backed by our team.
| → Authorized Canadian WD reseller |
→ Genuine WD product with warranty |
| → Fast shipping across Canada |
→ Business invoicing available |
| → Multiple capacities available |
→ Bilingual customer support |
|
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between WD Red, WD Red Plus, and WD Red Pro?
WD Red is the entry-level NAS drive — 5400 RPM, smaller cache, SMR recording on some capacities, and rated for up to 8-bay systems. WD Red Plus (this drive) is the mainstream choice — 7200 RPM, CMR recording on all capacities, 512MB cache, and rated for up to 8-bay systems with a 180 TB/year workload. WD Red Pro steps up for larger deployments — rated for up to 24-bay systems, a 550 TB/year workload, and a 5-year warranty. For most home and small business NAS builds with up to 8 bays, the WD Red Plus hits the right balance of performance and value.
Why does it matter that this uses CMR and not SMR?
SMR (Shingled Magnetic Recording) writes new tracks overlapping old ones — which improves density but causes significant write speed penalties during random writes and RAID rebuilds, as the drive must read, modify, and rewrite overlapping track bands. This can dramatically extend RAID rebuild times and cause poor NAS performance under mixed workloads. CMR (Conventional Magnetic Recording) has no such limitation — writes are direct and consistent. For NAS use, especially in RAID configurations, CMR is the reliable choice. The WD Red Plus uses CMR on all capacities.
What is TLER and why does it matter for RAID?
TLER (Time-Limited Error Recovery) limits how long the drive spends attempting to recover from a read error before reporting the problem back to the RAID controller. Desktop drives have no TLER — they may spend minutes attempting recovery on their own, during which the RAID controller assumes the drive has failed and may drop it from the array. WD Red Plus drives cap error recovery within a defined window, keeping the RAID controller informed and preventing unnecessary array degradation from a recoverable error.
Is the WD Red Plus compatible with my Synology or QNAP NAS?
WD Red Plus drives are tested and validated with major NAS brands including Synology, QNAP, and Asustor. Before purchasing, it is always advisable to verify compatibility with your specific NAS model using the manufacturer's online compatibility list — Synology's compatibility database and QNAP's compatibility list are both searchable by drive model number. The WD120EFGX is widely supported across current Synology DS, RS, and DX series enclosures and QNAP TS series enclosures.
My NAS has more than 8 bays — can I still use this drive?
The WD Red Plus is rated and validated for NAS systems with up to 8 drive bays. In enclosures with more bays, WD recommends the WD Red Pro — rated for up to 24-bay systems with a 550 TB/year workload and a 5-year warranty. Using a WD Red Plus in a larger enclosure may work in practice but falls outside the drive's validated specification and could affect warranty coverage. WD Red Pro drives are also available at ITFactory.ca.
Can I use this drive in a desktop PC or external enclosure?
Yes — the WD Red Plus uses a standard SATA III interface and will work in a desktop PC or external USB enclosure. However, it is optimized for NAS and RAID workloads. For a desktop PC primary drive, WD Blue or WD Black drives are better suited. For a standalone external drive, the WD Red Plus will function correctly but its NAS-specific features (TLER, NASware 3.0) are only meaningful in a NAS or RAID context.