http://www.zdnet.com/who-makes-the-b...es-7000025375/TL;DR version:"In general, Backblaze sees more problems with Seagate drives than the other two vendors. .... And in general the Seagate drives have proven to be less reliable overall.""Hitachi drives have proven to be the most reliable. Their annual failure rates have ranged from .9% all the way up to 1.5%."
I bought a 5 x 4TB's when they came out
Quote from Arseynimz: January 22, 2014, 01:05:43 pmI bought a 5 x 4TB's when they came outRaid 6 setup to protect dwarf porn collection?
Quote from BeNZene: January 23, 2014, 11:53:24 amQuote from Arseynimz: January 22, 2014, 01:05:43 pmI bought a 5 x 4TB's when they came outRaid 6 setup to protect dwarf porn collection?Single drive Redundancy on a FreeNAS dedicated box for all of the internet backing up that one must do on behalf of the world.
seagate also sell more drives so...so naturally their failure rate for peeps would seem high.Hitachi,,,make the best drives......if you are really concerned about quality drives.....dont buy sata...and buy only sas at 10K or 15K rpm if not buying ssd.The process and working components are better as they have to be for the speeds they must support so better quality and drive will last longer.......but will use more power and generate more heat....anything in the 7k speed space is rubbish...
anything in the 7k speed space is rubbish...
Quote from RightHandOnly: January 24, 2014, 10:29:07 pmseagate also sell more drives so...so naturally their failure rate for peeps would seem high.Hitachi,,,make the best drives......if you are really concerned about quality drives.....dont buy sata...and buy only sas at 10K or 15K rpm if not buying ssd.The process and working components are better as they have to be for the speeds they must support so better quality and drive will last longer.......but will use more power and generate more heat....anything in the 7k speed space is rubbish...What are you on dude?Firstly, failure rate is not a function of drives sold. If anything, drives sold would allow a more reliable estimate of failure rate. Not that that has any relevance to the data in the OP.Secondly, the drives in the study were in an always online storage server. This is far from how most consumers will use them. In that setting some power saving functions become a liability, increasing failure rate.And what?! Don't buy SATA?! Only buy SSDs or 10k??? Do you work for a hard drive manufacturer? The simple fact is that a cheap and cheerful 3/4TB will serve the storage needs of 98% of people, the other 2% can get another couple and set up a RAID array.
Seagate are the largest selling hard drive manufacturer on the Planet....so if they sell shitloads more drives but still say for example have a 5% failure rate ...lets assume a random number of 1 million drives sold in a period of time and the next closest manufacturer sells 500K the 5% failure rate means twice as many people would complain.I am not saying drives fail because more people buy them I am saying because a higher number of folks have seagate drives there could be more people moaning on the web that their drive is shit.
no I dont work for a hard drive vendor...but my main role in IT is Highend SAN storage Disk arrays and Design and implementation and stuff like that ....I work for a cloud provider....and I have worked for large companies and designed and managed many of their storage arrays....so DISK and stuff is a big part of my work life.You are right SATA is perfect for most home users...but if reliablility and speed and and long work rates and stuff are important...I stand by the dont buy sata.