It should be mentioned that, while reliability differences between
server and consumer lines are negligible, server lines typically have a
longer warranty period (WD Black is 5 yr), while consumer lines are
usually 1-3 years, depending on mfr and model.
--
-Eric 'shubes'
Joseph Sinclair wrote:
> A statistical analysis was published on a variety of disk drive lines a few years ago with a sample size of well over 100,000 drives[1].
> Other studies have shown negligible actual reliability differences between server and consumer lines across large populations.
> Quality on consumer drives tends to be more variable, but no lower overall.
>
> I've seen all of the major brands work and fail at similar rates across large numbers of drives. Sometimes a batch will be bad, and age-in-store has a huge impact on reliability.
>
> Overall, run load as heavy as your main application will do for the first 3 months, as many drive failures seem to happen then (and it'll be in warranty).
> After that, the next spike in failure happens at around 2 years and failure rates remain high thereafter.
>
> MTBF numbers seem to be largely irrelevant.
>
> Interestingly, SMART data seem to also be largely useless as well.
>
>
> [1] http://labs.google.com/papers/disk_failures.pdf
>
> Brian Cluff wrote:
>> I'll third on western digital, seagates are also pretty good, but
>> whatever you do don't even start to consider Maxtor. They seem to have
>> a near 100% failure rate. It's not if they are going to fail, but when.
>>
>> Also don't go with any hard drive manufacturers budget line or low end
>> drive, try and go for drives that are made for server. They aren't all
>> that much more, but seem to have much lower failure rates.
>>
>> Brian Cluff
>>
>> On 05/19/2010 03:14 PM, Shawn Badger wrote:
>>> +2 on Bonnie++
>>>
>>> I also tend to like the Western digital line for IDE/SATA drives. I have
>>> had a few bad ones (out of hundreds), but they tend to run well for me.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 3:09 PM, Alex Dean <alex@crackpot.org
>>> <mailto:alex@crackpot.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On May 19, 2010, at 5:07 PM, Nadim Hoque wrote:
>>>
>>> Hey,
>>>
>>> I am buying a new hard drive for my computer and I was wondering
>>> what are some good hard drive stress test and how long should I
>>> let it run for. I also do not mind what platform (windows, mac,
>>> or linux) it will run on. Speaking of hard drives, which brand
>>> do u guys recommend?
>>>
>>>
>>> Bonnie++ is a disk benchmarking tool, but you can use it for stress
>>> testing as well. Pretty easy to compile on Linux. I'm not sure if
>>> it works on OSX or windows.
>>>
>>> alex
>>>
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