SCSI reliability?

blakerwry

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I was thinking maxtor was claiming 1,000,000 hours on some of its ATA disks....

not sure exactly how they figure that mean time before failure, but it certainly isn't a measure of the average life of one of these disks.
 

Pradeep

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I believe it's more accurate to say that if were running 100 15k.3s (we wish...), you would get a failure in 1-3 of the drives each year.
 

Clocker

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You're right on Pradeep. Those numbers are based on a population of drives that are running.

C
 

Fushigi

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Pradeep said:
I believe it's more accurate to say that if were running 100 15k.3s (we wish...), you would get a failure in 1-3 of the drives each year.
I've got 93 IBM 15K drives across my 2 AS/400s. I lose about 3 drives a year. RAID is a wonderful thing.
 

Santilli

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Fushigi:
Don't blame Seagate for IBM's high number of failing drives. :lol:

:wink:

gs
 

Mickey

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blakerwry said:
I was thinking maxtor was claiming 1,000,000 hours on some of its ATA disks....

not sure exactly how they figure that mean time before failure, but it certainly isn't a measure of the average life of one of these disks.
1. Take a hundred* drives, run them through accelerated life testing (elevated temperature/humidity).
2. See how many accumulated hours of "run time" you get between failed drives.
3. Multiply by an acceleration factor (if applicable).

* Guess on my part. I know it's a large number, but I suppose it depends on how quickly you want to reach a certain MTBF rating (or how much test chamber space you have).
 
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