In principle, there is nothing to be said against it. However, NAS hard drives are designed for continuous operation. This means they run with lower revolutions, which is easier on them and advantageous from a heat point of view (the power consumption is also somewhat lower). The disadvantage of the lower rotations is that you have clear performance losses.
So if you only want to use them as data storage, why not.
But if you want to use it as system storage, I recommend a desktop hard drive or, if possible, an SSD.
Hi. You can find the Manufacturer No. by the specifications. It is ST10000VN0004 - and also listed as compatible for the tvs-671 by QNAP:
https://www.qnap.com/en-us/compatibility/?model=159&category=1
https://www.synology.com/de-de/compatibility?search_by=products&model=RS3413xs%2B&category=hdds&filter_brand=Seagate&p=1
Is not in the list of compatibility of Synology ;-(( However, bet my left arm that it runs with the disk.
I have a DS1817+ with 8x8 TB + DX517 with 5x6TB all WD RED and DS1815+ 8x6TB WD RED Pro and DX513 with Seagate Baracuda 5x4TB
Am away from QNAP and completely happy with Synology - Greets r00tli2k
The 5D supports up to 10TB disks (https://myproducts.drobo.com/article/aa-01124), but no SMR disks are supported, but this one is not an SMR disk according to the data sheet and should therefore run in a 5D.
"Cheating" is relative. Windows simply does not calculate directly with the power of 10 of Giga, but with another. To explain it would probably go beyond the scope of this article.
Effectively, you should get 950000 DISPLAYED here. I would like to point out that this is a NAS HDD, which was not made for PC use.