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A Spinning Potato: It's 2024, and hardware manufacturers are still competing to see who can produce the highest-capacity hard disk drives on the market. Seagate recently introduced its HAMR-powered Mozaic 3+ HDD platform, and Western Digital has responded with its first 32TB magnetic storage units.

Western Digital has announced an unexpected new capacity for its enterprise-focused hard disk drives. The San Jose company is now shipping the first samples of a new 32TB UltraSMR HDD unit, a nearline drive equipped with many of WD's advanced technology solutions. Select customers are currently testing these drives in their infrastructure.

The 32TB hard disk drive is based on advanced shingled magnetic recording (SMR), a somewhat controversial technology designed to increase storage density by slightly overlapping magnetic tracks to store digital bits. Compared to traditional perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR), SMR drives can experience performance and reliability issues. In 2020, WD faced criticism for selling SMR drives without informing customers about the cost-cutting measure.

The new 32TB drives incorporate some of the latest recording technologies from WD, such as energy-assisted magnetic recording (EAMR), which uses a laser diode to rapidly heat a tiny spot on the magnetic disk. Similar to Seagate's Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording (HAMR), EAMR aims to provide a significant increase in areal density while maintaining reliability in data retention.

WD's 32TB HDD also includes the Flash-based cache memory solution OptiNAND, a proprietary error-correction technology. According to WD CEO David Goeckeler, the new units can be easily integrated and deployed in pre-existing hyperscale data centers for cloud and enterprise ventures, thanks to their triple-stage actuators.

Like previous UltraSMR drives, the new unit requires additional management compared to non-SMR drives from other manufacturers. WD is clearly targeting customers already using its HDDs, offering a 20 percent increase in capacity over other SMR implementations. It is hoped that UltraSMR drives will not have reliability issues at this point.

While WD is focused on UltraSMR technology, Seagate introduced its non-shingled magnetic drives earlier this year. The Fremont-headquartered corporation is now selling the first units of its new 30TB Mozaic 3+ drives, which use post-PMR HAMR technology to provide seemingly higher reliability compared to older HDD models.

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Not knowing what the technology is, I bought several of them Seagate SMRs in 2010s and they universally died on Me, in droves, within few years. I don't know if It was actually connected to the SMR technology, or faulty line of SG disks, but I will never again knowingly buy either SMR drive or Seagate drive.
 
Would one of these SMR drives be ok in a NAS that is sometimes used to stream video but mostly just stores pictures, music and data ?

What are the down sides ?
 
Not knowing what the technology is, I bought several of them Seagate SMRs in 2010s and they universally died on Me, in droves, within few years. I don't know if It was actually connected to the SMR technology, or faulty line of SG disks, but I will never again knowingly buy either SMR drive or Seagate drive.

Seagate probably lol. I lost like 15 drives from them over the years and only 2 from WD. I got more than 50 drives. I just dont trust that company anymore. Their prices are super low, but the quality... ugh. Reminds me of Adata.
 
"based on advanced shingled magnetic recording (SMR), "
ew, smr

" higher reliability compared to older HDD models."
time will tell
 
32TB and maybe 1GB cache if you're lucky.
 
Seagate probably lol. I lost like 15 drives from them over the years and only 2 from WD. I got more than 50 drives. I just dont trust that company anymore. Their prices are super low, but the quality... ugh. Reminds me of Adata.
I clearly remember a moment when the quality of both WD and Seagate started to drop quickly. Around the same time the lowered consumer drive warranties to just one year.
I trust Seagate when they give 5 year warranty on their drives. 1y warranty definitely no.
I think they themselves never realized how much damage their companies and sales have received. That was a time a sane person would buy an ssd for everything beside really heavy data.
 
Seagate probably lol. I lost like 15 drives from them over the years and only 2 from WD. I got more than 50 drives. I just dont trust that company anymore. Their prices are super low, but the quality... ugh. Reminds me of Adata.

Adata was actually not that bad. I remember having a DDR2/800Mhz stick that was capable of doing 3/3/3/9 latencies. In times of the A64 having memory doing such timings was blazingly fast.

Anyway; in regards of the seagate drive qualty - I fully agree in regards of a private and professional standpoint. The private was randomly drives dying and losing data. The professional standpoint was data recovery on a more professional level such as PCB replacement, MCU swapping, firmware flashing and such.

Guess which brand was the top 5 ? You guessed it. Esp the drives that where used in external HDD enclosures. I don't know what seagate is doing but the quality tumbled down so hard.

I still have 5 ancient 250GB "Samsung" HDD's here that work perfectly fine. They are 15+ years old.

And 32TB takes a **** ton of time to even rebuild. Days!
 
Have had a mix of Seagate (Internal & External) and WD (internal & External) and the only drive failure I've had over the last 17 years (Windows 7 and newer computers) is a WD External drive. Am starting to wipe and phase out old 1/2 TB drives that just aren't worth having around. My primary purpose for computers (other than standard e-mail, web surf) is video editing of TV shows and Movies from ripped DVDs/BluRays/recorded from internet. Everything is streamed off a QNAP 2-bay NAS (only 1 Bay populated with a 14 TB Seagate Exos Enterprise drive 512K cache and 7200 rpm) which is backed up to 3 different computers with external HDs from 8-14 TB size. Only have about 6 TB of video and back up regular data (some Office files, personal files digitized from paper, etc - about 50-100 GB backed up to Proton Drive for security). The NAS has been running 24/7 for 5 years and am thinking about an upgrade to newer NAS with faster processor, more RAM, and 2.5G Ethernet to go along with WiFi 6 router to other parts of home. Will probably need some kind of Mesh to maximize speed to other parts of house (only 3 BR, 1450 sq ft but back part of house doesn't get good signal from front of house). Have completely overhauled setup (closed an off site office) so looking for off site backup solution for the home library of movies and personal data (Backblaze???).
 

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