Wednesday, April 3rd 2013
Seagate Ships 4 TB-class Hard Drives with 1 TB Per Platter Density
Seagate reportedly began shipping the industry's first 4 TB-class hard drives with 1 TB per platter density. Slotted in the company's Barracuda 7200.15 series, the drive provides 4000 GB of unformatted space, backed by 7,200 RPM spindle-speed, 64 MB buffer, and SATA 6 Gb/s interface. The drive is said to provide sequential speeds as high as 146 MB/s, with the 6 Gb/s interface enhancing buffer-to-host burst speeds. When it reaches stores, the OEM trim (drive-only) can be purchased for as low as US $190, and the retail version (boxed, with cables and documentation), for $212. At these prices, Seagate is claiming the lowest price-per-GB for any internal storage device in the industry. The terabyte platter technology should also make it possible for Seagate to launch a 5-platter 5000 GB hard drive soon.
Source:
MaximumPC
32 Comments on Seagate Ships 4 TB-class Hard Drives with 1 TB Per Platter Density
I just wonder when the hell Seagate plans to release hybrid desktop drives... they have them listed on their webpage but no info on the exact products. Just a general page of what it might be available someday...
Ironically enough, been able to get 3TB Seagates Barracudas for like 110 bucks for like three months now.
I want 2 of these *______________*
The seagate 3TB that is shipping right now can provide speeds up to 185MB/s...
So they are shipping slower, but bigger drive ? Did we hit a performance wall with mechanical HD ?
I want more capacity, but don't want less speed... please!
$169 w/ PromoCode EMCYTZT3213
Or 3TB 2.5" drives..
theharddriveblog.blogspot.ca/2013/02/4tb-seagate-stbd4000400-desktop-hard.html
We have... sort of hit a performance wall with HDDs. 4 TB has been the maximum capacity for quite some time. Supposedly, this is due to a combination of mechanical limits (similar to the approaching CPU limit) and patent lockdown (manufacturers each have their own proprietary methods to get to the current platter sizes, but aren't willing to share to make potentially bigger platters). If I remember, Western Digital is planning 5 TB drives at the end of this year. There was also a TPU article about using helium to increase HDD capacity. I'd love to get a 2 TB hard drive on a single platter, but that's not going to happen soon.
For a data storage drive, I'd actually prefer the slower 5900RPM. Less heat, less power, and slow rotating drives tend to last longer in my experience.
Large Drives like this are used for Storage, not as an OS drive.
VMs are slow enough on a 7200RPM drive... let alone a 5200 RPM drive.
I plan on getting a larger capacity SSD for my VMs when I can afford it.
Use a laptop (most have 5400/5200 RPM drives) and they are hella slow.