• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

Toshiba Announces MG10-D Series of Enterprise HDDs with Capacities up to 10TB

Nomad76

News Editor
Staff member
Joined
May 21, 2024
Messages
168 (4.00/day)
Toshiba Electronics Europe GmbH (Toshiba) announces the release of its MG10-D Series, a family of air-filled conventional magnetic recording (CMR) HDDs supporting SAS and SATA interfaces and capacities of up to 10 TB. Crafted with precision engineering and over 50 years of Toshiba experience, the MG10-D Series delivers improved performance and power efficiency over prior generations. With sanitize instant erase (SIE) and self-encrypting drive (SED) options, valuable data is safeguarded by a storage solution known for its robust performance and unwavering dependability.

Built for the increasing application demands of enterprise server and storage solutions, the MG10-D Series delivers a new level of performance. For example, compared with the previous model, the new 10 TB MG10ADA10TE provides an approximately 13% better maximum sustained transfer speed of 268MiB/s and doubles the cache buffer size to 512MiB. It also reduces power consumption in active idle mode by approximately 21%, to 5.74 W. Architected to deliver improved total cost of ownership (TCO), the new MG10-D Series fits seamlessly into a wide variety of business-critical applications, such as email, data analytics, data retention, and surveillance.





"Toshiba's MG10-D Series delivers exceptional performance to meet the demands of growing business critical applications. The new cutting-edge design of the MG10-D Series is engineered for sustainable enterprise environments and fits seamlessly into existing infrastructure reducing TCO," said Larry Martinez-Palomo, Vice President, Head of Storage Products Division at Toshiba.

The MG10-D Series is a 5-disk CMR standard 3.5-inch, 7200 RPM air-filled platform. Available capacities are 2 TB, 4 TB, 6 TB, 8 TB, and 10 TB for both SAS and SATA. SATA is also available in a 1 TB drive. The series supports 6 Gb/s SATA or 12 Gb/s SAS interface options in Advanced format 512e and 4Kn. A 512n option is available on the 1 TB, 2 TB, and 4 TB offerings to support legacy systems with native 512 byte block sizes. Designed for 24x7 enterprise reliability, the MG10-D Series has a workload rating of 550 TB, an AFR of 0.44% and an MTTF/MTBF of 2M hours.

The MG10-D Series will be available in CQ3.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,643 (1.73/day)
Wow. No HAMR? No Helium? Just conventional reliable 8TB and 10TB drives?

At the right price point, this is a very good buy IMO. But that's the big question, what price is this coming out at? With 18TB drives in the $250 price (albeit consumer), I'd say $200ish for a 10TB Enterprise would be fair.

I do run my own NAS at home and I don't see much need to go expensive Helium or HAMR or go much beyond 8TB. After all, a NAS is going to be composed of 4x hard drives (redundancy + speed), so 4x 8TB drives (effective 16TB space, 2 drive redundancy) is far more useful to me than 2x 16TB drives (which only has 1x drive redundancy). And I'd pay a premium for the extra drives. Its hard to put a number on reliability after all.

Hard Drive users today have to be mostly NAS-boxes, or maybe datacenter-scale NAS. And I expect most home NAS or even small-office commercial users would want ~4x HDDs at a minimum, and likely don't need much more space than 16TBs (total across 4x hard drives of 8TB each).
 

Solaris17

Super Dainty Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 16, 2005
Messages
26,184 (3.80/day)
Location
Alabama
System Name Rocinante
Processor I9 14900KS
Motherboard MSI MPG Z790I Edge WiFi Gaming
Cooling be quiet! Pure Loop 240mm
Memory 64GB Gskill Trident Z5 DDR5 6000
Video Card(s) MSI SUPRIM Liquid X 4090
Storage 1x 500GB 980 Pro | 1x 1TB 980 Pro | 1x 8TB Corsair MP400
Display(s) Odyssey OLED G9 (G95SC)
Case LANCOOL 205M MESH Snow
Audio Device(s) Moondrop S8's on schitt Modi+ & Valhalla 2
Power Supply ASUS ROG Loki SFX-L 1000W
Mouse Lamzu Atlantis mini (White)
Keyboard Monsgeek M3 Lavender, Akko Crystal Blues
VR HMD Quest 3
Software openSUSE Tumbleweed
Benchmark Scores I dont have time for that.
Wow. No HAMR? No Helium? Just conventional reliable 8TB and 10TB drives?

At the right price point, this is a very good buy IMO. But that's the big question, what price is this coming out at? With 18TB drives in the $250 price (albeit consumer), I'd say $200ish for a 10TB Enterprise would be fair.

I do run my own NAS at home and I don't see much need to go expensive Helium or HAMR or go much beyond 8TB. After all, a NAS is going to be composed of 4x hard drives (redundancy + speed), so 4x 8TB drives (effective 16TB space, 2 drive redundancy) is far more useful to me than 2x 16TB drives (which only has 1x drive redundancy). And I'd pay a premium for the extra drives. Its hard to put a number on reliability after all.

Hard Drive users today have to be mostly NAS-boxes, or maybe datacenter-scale NAS. And I expect most home NAS or even small-office commercial users would want ~4x HDDs at a minimum, and likely don't need much more space than 16TBs (total across 4x hard drives of 8TB each).

to add to this when I am building sans or setting up storage clusters/nodes; I always do 10, it doesn’t make sense to do raid1 and lose the performance on anything but the os drives (if we aren’t already iSCSI net booting.

for the most part in my career as a storage architect and just working on storage when I was in other roles; most companies are moving from raid 5 and 6 as a whole and I also will never implement it. They are actually not desired as storage prices fall and density goes up, because the chance of a URE increases and the odds you can rebuild that much capacity in those raid tiers falls dramatically.

for the price it makes much more sense to balance r/w performance and simply add more disks to the spans if you needed added hot spare redundancy.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,643 (1.73/day)
to add to this when I am building sans or setting up storage clusters/nodes; I always do 10, it doesn’t make sense to do raid1 and lose the performance on anything but the os drives (if we aren’t already iSCSI net booting.

for the most part in my career as a storage architect and just working on storage when I was in other roles; most companies are moving from raid 5 and 6 as a whole and I also will never implement it. They are actually not desired as storage prices fall and density goes up, because the chance of a URE increases and the odds you can rebuild that much capacity in those raid tiers falls dramatically.

for the price it makes much more sense to balance r/w performance and simply add more disks to the spans if you needed added hot spare redundancy.

Yeah, I'm writing in a way to try to avoid the RAID6 vs RAID10 flamewar. But 4x HDDs seems to be the point where a lot of nice things happen. 4-hard drives as a minimum on any HDD based solution is a good place to sit.

You really don't want RAID5, or any other architecture which can only withstand 1x error. You need to withstand 1x error, and then allow for a rebuild (where the rebuild itself can withstand a 2nd error). After all, its the rebuild where the 2nd error is often discovered.

Not that I do RAID anymore, but instead ZFS mirroring / parity / etc. etc., or Windows Storage Spaces if I ever plan to use Windows. Modern software has gotten much better and should be the default choice than the older RAID drivers. (And modern CPUs are so fast that the extra CPU-hit on all those I/O calculations is fine. Except on Windows: parity IIRC was still broken and awful performance-wise last time I checked)

In any case, 4x hard drives are needed for a good long-term solution. Be it RAID10, RAID6, ZFS Parity with 2 drive redundancy, or Windows Storage Spaces with striped+mirroring enabled. 4x drives maps to a large number of software and hardware solutions that its the best starting point.
 
Joined
Jul 29, 2022
Messages
416 (0.59/day)
Wow. No HAMR? No Helium? Just conventional reliable 8TB and 10TB drives?
WD (HGST) also had them for a while. However in their case they ended up using the Helium drives with conventional air packaging (for 8TB and 10TB models), which resulted in extremely loud and super hot disks (think 70C without active airflow). Of course they also sell them as external drives which don't have airflow in the first place.

As far as I know WD only ever got up to 1.67TB platters, anything above that used SMR. So if Toshiba got 2TB platter CMR drives, in 4x platters for the 8TB drive, then they'd beat WDs offerings.
On the other hand Toshiba only seems to have 7200rpm drives so probably not.
 
Joined
Jun 11, 2019
Messages
518 (0.28/day)
Location
Moscow, Russia
Processor Intel 12600K
Motherboard Gigabyte Z690 Gaming X
Cooling CPU: Noctua NH-D15S; Case: 2xNoctua NF-A14, 1xNF-S12A.
Memory Ballistix Sport LT DDR4 @3600CL16 2*16GB
Video Card(s) Palit RTX 4080
Storage Samsung 970 Pro 512GB + Crucial MX500 500gb + WD Red 6TB
Display(s) Dell S2721qs
Case Phanteks P300A Mesh
Audio Device(s) Behringer UMC204HD
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ 560W
Mouse Glorious Model D-
What's wrong with HAMR/MAMR and helium?
 
Low quality post by bonehead123
Joined
Oct 18, 2013
Messages
5,746 (1.47/day)
Location
In the abyss, where all I can see is...nuthin !
System Name The Little One
Processor i5-11320H @4.4GHZ
Motherboard AZW SEI
Cooling Fan w/heat pipes + side & rear vents
Memory 64GB Crucial DDR4-3200 (2x 32GB)
Video Card(s) Iris XE
Storage WD Black SN850X 4TB m.2, Seagate 2TB SSD + SN850 4TB x2 in an external enclosure
Display(s) 2x Samsung 43" & 2x 32"
Case Practically identical to a mac mini, just purrtier in slate blue, & with 3x usb ports on the front !
Audio Device(s) Yamaha ATS-1060 Bluetooth Soundbar & Subwoofer
Power Supply 65w brick
Mouse Logitech MX Master 2
Keyboard Logitech G613 mechanical wireless
Software Windows 10 pro 64 bit, with all the unnecessary background shitzu turned OFF !
Benchmark Scores PDQ
Wow. No HAMR? No Helium?
You forgot the "A" word, which is strangely absent from this PR....

Dammit, now I gotsta go & fire them PR people for allowing such garbage to even get published :roll:
 
Joined
Jul 29, 2022
Messages
416 (0.59/day)
This is not correct. WD/Hitachi have gone well beyond that.
I just checked, yeah, they got up to 2.2TB CMR. and 2.6TB SMR. However does require energy/heats assisted magnetic recordings, so they only really put these platters in high capacity helium filled enterprise drives where they can use up to 10 platters per drive thanks to helium.

WD air filled drives still cap at 1.67TB platters as far as I know.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,643 (1.73/day)
What's wrong with HAMR/MAMR and helium?

Nothing in particular. They're just the newest technologies that allow for 20TB and beyond hard drives.

Since it requires more advanced tech to reach 20TB and beyond, there are questions in my mind if its "worth it", especially for the typical home consumer. Having a collection of cheaper, traditional hard drives built off of a lower-technology platform could be interesting moving forward.
 
Joined
Jun 11, 2019
Messages
518 (0.28/day)
Location
Moscow, Russia
Processor Intel 12600K
Motherboard Gigabyte Z690 Gaming X
Cooling CPU: Noctua NH-D15S; Case: 2xNoctua NF-A14, 1xNF-S12A.
Memory Ballistix Sport LT DDR4 @3600CL16 2*16GB
Video Card(s) Palit RTX 4080
Storage Samsung 970 Pro 512GB + Crucial MX500 500gb + WD Red 6TB
Display(s) Dell S2721qs
Case Phanteks P300A Mesh
Audio Device(s) Behringer UMC204HD
Power Supply Fractal Design Ion+ 560W
Mouse Glorious Model D-
Nothing in particular. They're just the newest technologies that allow for 20TB and beyond hard drives.

Since it requires more advanced tech to reach 20TB and beyond, there are questions in my mind if its "worth it", especially for the typical home consumer. Having a collection of cheaper, traditional hard drives built off of a lower-technology platform could be interesting moving forward.
Might be a regional thing but looking at Toshiba prices here, a 10TB drive is more expensive per TB than a 20TB one so purely on value it makes sense to buy bigger if there's a lot of data. Same with WD and Seagate. But I'm not building storage bays for other people so can't comment on any potential hiccups or endurance/longevity.
 
Joined
Nov 1, 2008
Messages
472 (0.08/day)
System Name It does stuff
Processor Ryzen 3600
Motherboard B550 Gaming X V2
Cooling Stock
Memory 16GB DDR4 3600
Video Card(s) RX 6700XT
Storage Too much
Display(s) 27" & 21.5"
Case Antec 300
Power Supply 750W
Up to 10TB? What decade is this?
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
7,606 (3.88/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
No-nonsense, tried-and-trusted CMR without He or HAMR is appealing at the right price point.

I'm looking at 100-500TB solutions a few times a year and right now a lot of providers will try to convince you to go all-flash which completely overdelivers on performance and completely underdelivers on price.

Despite all the major players trying to get away from hybrid (ie, mechanical disks - because almost nobody makes multi-drive solutions without a flash cache these days) the issue is that AF arrays are still too damn expensive for a lot of situations and if a hybrid array can delivery 250TB of storage with adequate IOPS for 1/3rd the cost of an AF solution, then that's what we'll take.

Personally, I'm interested in taking EOL production storage that was sold 6+ years ago with 4TB drives and replacing the drives to use it as tier-2 storage that's not mission-critical. Highly-compatible, basic, guaranteed-to-work disks still have a large market, even if they're not at the bleeding edge of cost/TB...
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,643 (1.73/day)
Might be a regional thing but looking at Toshiba prices here, a 10TB drive is more expensive per TB than a 20TB one so purely on value it makes sense to buy bigger if there's a lot of data. Same with WD and Seagate. But I'm not building storage bays for other people so can't comment on any potential hiccups or endurance/longevity.

Are you seriously planning on filling up a 20TB drive without any resiliency strategy?

If you are having a resiliency strategy (RAID6, RAID10, or similar), do you seriously expect to fill up 40TB of data in any time in the next decade?

These amounts of TB are basically infinite to me either way. 10TB is similar to 20TB or 40TB. I can safely say that I simply do not generate that kind of data size even across years of my life.

The only net gain I can do is resiliency and convenience. NAS for iSCSI and network storage features.... And then guarantees about needed to break 2+ hard drives before I lose data.
 
Joined
Jul 5, 2013
Messages
25,959 (6.47/day)
Are you seriously planning on filling up a 20TB drive without any resiliency strategy?
Why not? Most drives are very reliable these days. And let's be fair, anyone who's going to store that much data is likely going to have a backup plan of some sort. Let's not grill or bother them about the subject.
 
Joined
Apr 24, 2020
Messages
2,643 (1.73/day)
Why not? Most drives are very reliable these days. And let's be fair, anyone who's going to store that much data is likely going to have a backup plan of some sort. Let's not grill or bother them about the subject.

MTBF hasn't really improved at all for HDDs. HDDs have failed at roughly the same rate (somewhere between 1% to 10%, depending on model) for decades.

Its not a "big" chance of failure, but its often enough that you should plan for it. Especially because we only know what the "true" chance of failure is 4 or 5 years from now after a hard drive model has been deployed and used for years in practice.
 
Joined
Jul 5, 2013
Messages
25,959 (6.47/day)
MTBF hasn't really improved at all for HDDs.
Um, yeah it has. Granted, by single digit percentages, but still, that is significant.
HDDs have failed at roughly the same rate (somewhere between 1% to 10%, depending on model) for decades.
That is not correct. In 2020 I RMA'd 27 HDD's out of 556 sold. In 2010 that number was 41 out of 491. Mind you, that is just my business, but those numbers are inline with the national averages. Those numbers have steadily declined. I haven't sold as many HDD's this year, but so far, the RMA's are single digit. Regardless...
Its not a "big" chance of failure, but its often enough that you should plan for it.
...on this point we agree. People should be planning for failures and making backups!
 
Joined
Feb 20, 2019
Messages
7,606 (3.88/day)
System Name Bragging Rights
Processor Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz
Motherboard It has no markings but it's green
Cooling No, it's a 2.2W processor
Memory 2GB DDR3L-1333
Video Card(s) Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz)
Storage 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3
Display(s) 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz
Case Veddha T2
Audio Device(s) Apparently, yes
Power Supply Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger
Mouse MX Anywhere 2
Keyboard Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all)
VR HMD Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though....
Software W10 21H1, barely
Benchmark Scores I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000.
Um, yeah it has. Granted, by single digit percentages, but still, that is significant.

That is not correct. In 2020 I RMA'd 27 HDD's out of 556 sold. In 2010 that number was 41 out of 491. Mind you, that is just my business, but those numbers are inline with the national averages. Those numbers have steadily declined. I haven't sold as many HDD's this year, but so far, the RMA's are single digit. Regardless...

...on this point we agree. People should be planning for failures and making backups!
You're selling consumer drives to consumers, right? Your 5-8% RMA rates seem high to me but I only deal with enterprise rust that gets shipped direct from manufacturer to me in their original packaging and then put into a rack that never moves around or gets bumped for the entire working life of the drive.

I'm not disputing your figures, just surprised that I have so many spinning disks (1000 or so) that result in a drive failure 2-5x a year for a typical disk life under support contract of around 6 years. (~2.5% of drives fail during their whole lifespan, which is a 0.4% annual failure rate.

Perhaps all the stats we ever see for HDD failures are consumer-driver stats, or total manufacturer RMA rates that are weighted-up by consumer stats. I know Backblaze publish annually and they had a history of buying the cheapest external drives they could find at retail and shucking them, though I'm not sure if they still do that....
 
Joined
Sep 15, 2011
Messages
6,552 (1.40/day)
Processor Intel® Core™ i7-13700K
Motherboard Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Elite AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15
Memory 32GB(2x16) DDR5@6600MHz G-Skill Trident Z5
Video Card(s) ZOTAC GAMING GeForce RTX 3080 AMP Holo
Storage 2TB SK Platinum P41 SSD + 4TB SanDisk Ultra SSD + 500GB Samsung 840 EVO SSD
Display(s) Acer Predator X34 3440x1440@100Hz G-Sync
Case NZXT PHANTOM410-BK
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi Titanium PCIe
Power Supply Corsair 850W
Mouse Logitech Hero G502 SE
Software Windows 11 Pro - 64bit
Benchmark Scores 30FPS in NFS:Rivals
At the right price point, this is a very good buy IMO. But that's the big question, what price is this coming out at? With 18TB drives in the $250 price (albeit consumer), I'd say $200ish for a 10TB Enterprise would be fair.
There is absolutely nothing fair about a 10TB spin rust to cost more than a 100$, what th are you talking about?!?
Any other price except this is, it's an callous overpricing.
You have to consider that soon we are going to have 8TB, 12TB and 16TB QLC and PLC SSD Drives, that are going to blow those out of water, for almost similar prices in the future.

1719570726805.png
 
Joined
Jul 5, 2013
Messages
25,959 (6.47/day)
You're selling consumer drives to consumers, right? Your 5-8% RMA rates seem high to me but I only deal with enterprise rust that gets shipped direct from manufacturer to me in their original packaging and then put into a rack that never moves around or gets bumped for the entire working life of the drive.
Keep in mind, most of the HDD's I sell are the economy models to the general public. I did not include upgrades, external enclosures, business workstations or server sales, which is a completely different side of my business and are accounted for differently. I've been selling SSD's as main OS drives since they first became "affordable" in 2009. I stopped selling QLC based drives several years ago as they were going defective at an alarming rate.
 
Joined
Jan 2, 2024
Messages
297 (1.63/day)
Location
Seattle
System Name DevKit
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 3600 ↗4.0GHz
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming X570-Plus WiFi
Cooling Koolance CPU-300-H06, Koolance GPU-180-L06, SC800 Pump
Memory 4x16GB Ballistix 3200MT/s ↗3600
Video Card(s) PowerColor RX 580 Red Devil 8GB ↗1380MHz ↘1105mV, PowerColor RX 7900 XT Hellhound 20GB
Storage 240GB Corsair MP510, 120GB KingDian S280
Display(s) Nixeus VUE-24 (1080p144)
Case Koolance PC2-601BLW + Koolance EHX1020CUV Radiator Kit
Audio Device(s) Oculus CV-1
Power Supply Antec Earthwatts EA-750 Semi-Modular
Mouse Easterntimes Tech X-08, Zelotes C-12
Keyboard Logitech 106-key, Romoral 15-Key Macro, Royal Kludge RK84
VR HMD Oculus CV-1
Software Windows 10 Pro Workstation, VMware Workstation 16 Pro, MS SQL Server 2016, Fan Control v120, Blender
Benchmark Scores Cinebench R15: 1590cb Cinebench R20: 3530cb (7.83x451cb) CPU-Z 17.01.64: 481.2/3896.8 VRMark: 8009
At the right price point, this is a very good buy IMO. But that's the big question, what price is this coming out at? With 18TB drives in the $250 price (albeit consumer), I'd say $200ish for a 10TB Enterprise would be fair.

I do run my own NAS at home and I don't see much need to go expensive Helium or HAMR or go much beyond 8TB.
Anyone with a functional NAS or anyone still sitting the fence on deciding if a personal DAS is in their future might love this lineup.
At ~$320ish I pulled the trigger on a 16TB MG08 series Toshiba with that giganto 512MB cache and for the past few years it's been hosting my iSCSI volumes.
This year it went from cold spare to full time 24/7 duty and it's great. The MG10 series drives aren't targeted for my use case but if sub-$130ish at 10TB, that's a steal.
Writes are always gonna suck because iSCSI but so far the reads are really nice. I probably made the best choice here.
1719630999940.png
 
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
20,956 (3.40/day)
System Name Pioneer
Processor Ryzen R9 7950X
Motherboard GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX
Cooling Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans...
Memory 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30
Video Card(s) XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310
Storage Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs
Display(s) 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display
Case Thermaltake Core X31
Audio Device(s) TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED
Power Supply FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W
Mouse Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless
Keyboard WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps
Software Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024
Top