Has anyone reported this issue to apple? I have a similar issue with a WD elements 12 tb drive.
I replaced a smaller WD drive with this drive when I started getting drive issues after buying a macbook pro 14 inch 2021.
The drive will be stable and then after a while it will oscillate between sleep mode and waking up every minute, unless you are constantly reading or writing.......How are there not more people throwing a stink about this issue, it seems like it would be systemic as tons of professionals use the wd elements drives as their workhorses.......Like others on here, I have a strong feeling that this is not a drive issue but an operating system/new hardware issue.......I never had these problems on my macbook air 2015.
I did use Apples bug reporting form to report this. Whether they actually do anything with that or not is unknown.
From what I've deduced by trying to solve this problem relentlessly since Studio arrived, the problem seems mostly centered in HDD-RAIDs, not one-drive setups and not SSD-RAIDS. Get 2 more more hard drives working as one in a box and you may have this problem. It MAY be hit or miss, meaning some boxes work and some don't... or perhaps in cases where some seem to work, their owners are only having them hooked up for short enough periods of time to not notice. For example, if I was turning mine on, using it for up to as much as about 3 hours and then ejecting it myself, I might not perceive I have a problem at all. Its the
continuous connection scenario where this shows, especially if the Mac goes to sleep.
I've had at least ONE person assure me that they have a HDD-based LACIE RAID box that doesn't do this. However, Lacie won't sell that enclosure empty and I don't want to buy hard drives when I already have good-sized ones to use.
I have seen some posts here and there where people may be having this problem with single drive HDDs too but I could never tell that for sure. Perhaps some people have 2-drive boxes that they think is a single drive because that's how some RAID setups appear on screen (like they are one big hard drive). Many of them WD boxes are like that- 2 drives inside instead of one big drive.
For the most part, I feel like I've ruled out Studio hardware... mostly shining the light on Monterey as most likely culprit. I wish I could try a pre-Big Sur version of macOS on this Studio to fully put that to the test. I suspect my own RAID box would resume normal operations with Catalina or earlier.
It "feels" like this solution fully belongs to Apple squashing some bug(s) in Monterey (prob Big Sur too given some of what I've seen around the web).
I've since reached the "give up" point, purchasing OWC's Ministack STX and using one big HDD inside. Besides the otherwise useless expense of this extra hardware, I also paid by giving up about twice as much storage by stepping down to a single drive setup. However, for a full 7 days now, that
one-drive Ministack STX connected via Thunderbolt has not unexpectedly ejected. So if someone can "get by" with an up to 20TB single drive setup, I can vouch for that box definitely working well.
For a new Mac geared to video production, if this problem manifests with many HDD-RAIDs, I think it's a big problem. Video production begs for big storage, much bigger than will fit on even 8TB inside and up to 20TB in a single HDD box outside. I'm guessing the really big houses would probably store the bulk of their projects on big NAS-based storage which does NOT seem affected (for example, my own Synology RAID remains consistently connected but that's linked by Ethernet instead of USB or Thunderbolt). So I suspect the pain will be felt by the independents leaning on one computer with big HDD-RAID DAS setups instead of NAS.
For anyone interested, the Ministack offered one more test I could try: I connected the RAID to one of the spare USB-C jacks on the Ministack to see if perhaps it as "middleman" powered hub might solve the problem. It did not. RAID box would still eject after up to about 3 hours of usage while the single drive HDD inside the Ministack would remain consistently connected. I had already tried a few powered hubs before but what was unique in this experiment is that this hub was connected with Thunderbolt 4 instead of USB-A or USB-C.
Best I can tell, I've tried EVERY user option available other than buying a bunch of HDD-RAID enclosures to see if I'm able to find ANY (other than maybe that Lacie) that can stay consistently connected with this Mac. Maybe one of the Mac-focused YouTube celebs will read this thread and break out a bunch of theirs to do some tests of this issue. For video and other big file users, there is probably an important story here that seems covered only by piecing together many tidbits spread all over the web.