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Western Digital on Thursday (23/04) released an updated statement about the company's stand on SMR (shingled magnetic recording) being used on certain internal hard drives, including certain client-segment WD Red models recommended by the company for NAS applications, without proper disclosure on the product's marketing materials or data-sheets. It's surprising to note that SMR is being used not in some of the higher-capacity models (8 TB or higher) as previously thought, but rather lower-capacity ones, 6 TB or lower, including a 2 TB 3.5-inch drive, and a 1 TB 2.5-incher.
Perhaps SMR is being used in these lower-capacity drives to reduce the number of platters, by cramming in more data per recording surface. As on 22nd April (when the list was internally compiled by Western Digital), there are 9 client-segment hard drives that use SMR, four of which are from the company's WD Red family, two each from the WD Blue 3.5-inch and WD Blue 2.5-inch families; and one from the 2.5-inch WD Black family. Among the WD Red series drives with SMR are the 2 TB WD20EFAX, the 3 TB WD30EFAX, the 4 TB WD40EFAX, and the 6 TB WD60EFAX.
The undisclosed SMR controversy blew up on Western Digital's face last week, when a Blocks & Files report chronicled incidents of several WD Red series HDDs being rejected in RAID volumes during their resilvering process. Over the course, it was learned that even Seagate and Toshiba were selling HDDs with undisclosed SMR, though none marketed as "NAS optimized" ones.
Western Digital earlier this week posted its first response to the controversy, by admitting that some WD Red HDDs use drive-managed SMR (DM-SMR), an internal SMR implementation that's transparent to the host, and pointing NAS users to the company's WD Red Pro, WD Gold or even enterprise-grade Ultrastar product lines. SMR is a physical-layer recording technique that overlaps write tracks over each other to achieve greater data density at the high cost of random write performance, which makes them effectively unfit for serious RAID applications (in turn NAS applications that use some form of internal RAID). Western Digital also provided a general guideline as to which class of its client-segment hard drives are likely to feature SMR.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Perhaps SMR is being used in these lower-capacity drives to reduce the number of platters, by cramming in more data per recording surface. As on 22nd April (when the list was internally compiled by Western Digital), there are 9 client-segment hard drives that use SMR, four of which are from the company's WD Red family, two each from the WD Blue 3.5-inch and WD Blue 2.5-inch families; and one from the 2.5-inch WD Black family. Among the WD Red series drives with SMR are the 2 TB WD20EFAX, the 3 TB WD30EFAX, the 4 TB WD40EFAX, and the 6 TB WD60EFAX.
The undisclosed SMR controversy blew up on Western Digital's face last week, when a Blocks & Files report chronicled incidents of several WD Red series HDDs being rejected in RAID volumes during their resilvering process. Over the course, it was learned that even Seagate and Toshiba were selling HDDs with undisclosed SMR, though none marketed as "NAS optimized" ones.
Western Digital earlier this week posted its first response to the controversy, by admitting that some WD Red HDDs use drive-managed SMR (DM-SMR), an internal SMR implementation that's transparent to the host, and pointing NAS users to the company's WD Red Pro, WD Gold or even enterprise-grade Ultrastar product lines. SMR is a physical-layer recording technique that overlaps write tracks over each other to achieve greater data density at the high cost of random write performance, which makes them effectively unfit for serious RAID applications (in turn NAS applications that use some form of internal RAID). Western Digital also provided a general guideline as to which class of its client-segment hard drives are likely to feature SMR.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site