Tag Archive for: HGST

8TB disks seem to work pretty well, HGST still impressive

(credit: Alpha six)

Cloud backup and storage provider Backblaze has published its latest batch of drive reliability data. The release covers failure information for the 70,000 disks that the company uses to store some 250PB of data.

This is the first quarter that Backblaze has been using a reasonable number of new 8TB disks: 45 from HGST and 2720 from Seagate. Drives from both companies are showing comparable annualized failure rates: 3.2 percent for HGST, 3.3 percent for Seagate. While the smaller HGST drives show better reliability, with annualized failure rates below one percent for the company’s 4TB drives, the figures are typical for Seagate, which Backblaze continues to prefer over other alternatives due to Seagate’s combination of price and availability.

Annualized failure rates for all of Backblaze's drives.

Annualized failure rates for all of Backblaze’s drives. (credit: Backblaze)

But it’s still early days for the 8TB drives. While evidence for the phenomenon is inconclusive, hard drive reliability is widely assumed to experience a “bathtub curve” when plotting its failure rate against time: failure rates are high when the drives are new (due to “infant mortality” caused by drives that contain manufacturing defects) and when the drives reach their expected lifetime (due to the accumulated effects of wear and tear), with a period of several years of low failure rates in the middle. If the bathtub theory is correct, Backblaze’s assortment of 8TB drives should suffer fewer failures in the future.

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Technology Lab – Ars Technica

HGST balloons disk capacity with helium-filled 6TB drive

This should be a gas for the storage-hungry: Western Digital’s HGST unit, which makes disk storage for the enterprise market, has begun shipping helium-filled 3.5-inch hard drives with a massive storage boost. The new drives have six terabytes of storage capacity—50 percent more than that of conventional drives of the same size.

The technology required to keep the helium reliably sealed within the drives, called Helioseal, has been in development by HGST for over 10 years. The company initially announced this commercial development in September of 2012. The use of helium rather than air allows additional storage platters to be squeezed into the design, nearly doubling their capacity with existing storage media technology while reducing power consumption and weight.

The new six terabyte Ultrastar He6 fits seven disk platters into the same form factor as HGST’s previous five-platter/four terabyte drive. In addition to half again as much capacity, the drives run considerably cooler than conventional drives—as much as four to five degrees Celsius cooler, greatly reducing heat output. These drives even consume 23 percent less power at idle, drawing just 5.3 watts

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