Adcadet
Storage Freak
Anybody?
No. Not until a few more platters are added.Adcadet said:Anybody?
Is there not a parallel ATA version of this drive? If the only interface is SATA, then it is totally useless as an "upgrade" in many systems.Buck said:I would need to get a SATA controller card too.
LunarMist said:Is there not a parallel ATA version of this drive? If the only interface is SATA, then it is totally useless as an "upgrade" in many systems.Buck said:I would need to get a SATA controller card too.
tea said:Sure, power on causes wear. But starting and stopping and heating and cooling cause a hell of a lot more wear. We build computers every day and usually look after them for their entire working lives. And while I think we build pretty good systems, we have our share of failures: drives that die, main boards that go kaput, and so on. But in our own systems, the five systems that run the office and the one I have at home, we have had the following parts fail in the last ten years. (Yes, I can list them exactly - there are not so many that I can't remember them.)
- The Micropolis 2217 (my own fault)
- An Intel ISA network card in my main server, which just died one day. It was maybe four years old
- The CPU fan in my Thunderbird 1400, which then cooked the chip but not, astonishingly enough, the motherboard.
- The power supply in my DOS box, which died about 5 years ago.
- The replacement power supply in my DOS box, which has gone intermittent this last week or two. I should be changing it now - but here I am wasting time on the web again.
- The CPU in my DOS box, an AMD 5x86-133 which has been in there since near-new and has never had a fan on it - yeah, yeah, I know. You are supposed to use a fan on those things, and we would never dream of leaving the fan out of a customer's machine, but it was only a 5x86 and I was curious to see how long it would stand it for. Ans: about five years. It used to get very hot, too hot to touch, but it never used to crash. The crappy old Pentium-100 board I replaced it with (properly cooled this time) is not as stable, and no faster than the old thing was for the tasks this box usually does - formatting floppy discs and stuff like that..
- Various assorted keyboards, mice, floppy drives, and CD-ROM drives that just wore out or got tea poured on them or had other nasty accidents..
- The Sony 40-speed CD-ROM drive in the spare back office machine, which started playing up not long ago while still under warranty. Actually, come to think of it, that machine does get turned on and off a bit. Sometimes I get sick of the sound of two computers under my desk and switch it off for a while. (It has two of the oldest SCSI drives, by the way: a 1GB IBM and a 2.2GB Quantum.)
Most of the time, most of those machines have had IDE drives in them.
The secret is: turn off all that power management crap. Don't let your drive spin down, because if you spin it down you have to spin it up again, and spinning a drive up is very hard work. And if you let it cool down you have to warm it up again, and that heating-cooling cycle is what kills electronic circuit boards. They expand, they contract, the traces become brittle and eventually they develop hair-line cracks in them. That's what kills components.
Active cooling does no harm, but all you need is decent airflow in the case. I use active cooling for one of my two X15s because it shares a fairly small case with a very large CPU and the case lives in a sealed cupboard to keep the noise down - which is why my XP 1700 runs only just cool enough.
Oh, and don't be too hard on my DOS box with its habit of blowing power supplies. Sure, it's about to get its second new PSU, but they were only cheap ones and it started life as a 12MHz 286. I had more hair then.
Tea said:Yup. Solid-state storage is boring.
blakerwry said:Tea said:Yup. Solid-state storage is boring.
aww, you didnt mentino the old post i dug up tea... how old where you then?
Dïscfärm said:The WD Raptor product seems rather obviously a rush job -- a rush to get a product out because WD probably caught wind of someone else preparing to release a 10kRPM ATA drive. And, if it really is a "rush job" product, it could be obviated by its replacement in as little as 6 months.
blakerwry said:blakerwry said:Tea said:Yup. Solid-state storage is boring.
aww, you didnt mentino the old post i dug up tea... how old where you then?
As already mentioned earlier tonight.. my spelling goes to pot after 12:00am... maybe I need to clean this keyboard...
That's what I heard, too. I've never seen a new platform come out after only a few months of work; it usually takes closer to a year at best for a new platform.Buck said:Interesting observation. From the information that I received, WD had this drive on their roadmap at the beginning of 2002. That is much longer then their other products stay on their roadmap before release.
If you've heard that it's been in development since Q1 / 2002, then at least the mechanicals aren't a rush job. Otherwise, the performance of the drive (as first published) as well as the connectors used pretty much scream out Rush Job.Buck said:Interesting observation. From the information that I received, WD had this drive on their roadmap at the beginning of 2002. That is much longer then their other products stay on their roadmap before release.
:lol: That was great! A disk drive hatchery!Dïscfärm said:Behind the hardened steel doors of every hard drive manufacturer, guarded by rabid German shepherds nonetheless, are the laboratories where various "candidate" drives spin the hours and days away in burn-in chambers. And, within these burn-in chambers simulating years worth of "normal" operational time in weeks -- where the ambient temperatures are high and the I/O loads are heavy -- are the hard drives that will become the next new model. A group of each of these drive mechanisms could, presumably, have an assortment of interfaces attached (PATA, SATA, SCSI, SAS, F-C), with each interface receiving firmware updates, when needed, by the engineers evaluating them.
Realising all of the above, someone might then suspect that suddenly one day late in 2002, a Product yay-hoo at WD ordered a 10kRPM SATA drive to be delivered ASAP. March 2003, it arrives -- with firmware still being updated as the cardboard boxes arrive at the reviewers' doorsteps.