Post #50,573
9/5/02 1:54:13 AM
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Re: I think I have never met a Seagate drive . . .
I've got a pair of 10G Barracudas right here that have been just peachy for the past two years.
Noisy, but fast'n'good.
As y'all know, I tend a herd of about 150 desktop PCs, plus about 200-250 development machines (of all flavours), plus the usual array of weird shit kit, plus a couple of dozen servers.
The number one failing drive manufacturer?
Maxtor. By a country mile. Thankfully Dell saw the light and reinstituted their policy of letting experienced IT departments diagnose dead disks and suchlike and then just sending out the part (with the farked part being collected), instead of insisting that the whole unit be returned to Milton Keynes.
I've sent quite a few Maxtors back - it seems to be mainly the units under 10G and especially the 8G ones that suck. They're slow, too.
Peter [link|http://www.debian.org|Shill For Hire] [link|http://www.kuro5hin.org|There is no K5 Cabal] [link|http://guildenstern.dyndns.org|Blog]
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Post #50,598
9/5/02 10:06:19 AM
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Bad hard drives
Quantum are about as bad as I have seen. I've seen a lot of them fail, I also remember Apple getting a bad batch of them and claiming that the hard drive was the problem, not the Macintosh. Quantum drives do make great paperweights.
Wester Digital as well, but then I've had mixed luck, mostly good on them, while others I know (like my brother) have had nothing but bad luck with WD drives.
[link|http://games.speakeasy.net/data/files/khan.jpg|"Khan!!!" -Kirk]
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Post #50,617
9/5/02 11:18:07 AM
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Re: Bad hard drives
Quantum disks are among the best I've seen for reliability and performance.
I'm basing this on a bunch of servers with RAID 5 disk arrays built from Quantum Atlas V disks.
They just don't fail.
Peter [link|http://www.debian.org|Shill For Hire] [link|http://www.kuro5hin.org|There is no K5 Cabal] [link|http://guildenstern.dyndns.org|Blog]
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Post #50,724
9/5/02 10:38:24 PM
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Mine did
perhaps they built the IDE 80M drives differently back then? I imagine they got better QC when they started making the RAID drives?
[link|http://games.speakeasy.net/data/files/khan.jpg|"Khan!!!" -Kirk]
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Post #50,738
9/5/02 11:06:18 PM
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All brands fail at a fairly high rate.
Particular models and particular manufacturing runs within any particular brand may have unusually high failure rates. The result is that some people think a particular brand is great, and others think it's trash - depends on whether they got one of those lots. I remember one Toshiba model I used years ago, where every single drive died in less than two years (with loud clanking noises).
I had particularly good luck with Fujitsu, but they've pulled out of the desktop drive business. Haven't had any IBM IDE failures, but haven't used that many of their drives (and they're cashing in the drive chips too). Have had more failures than I like with IBM SCSI drives, but not as bad as Seagate (never used any of those 80-Gig IBMs which failed early and often). I've never liked Maxtors much, but there's not a lot left right now with consistent availability.
A lot of system builders swear by Western Digital, but my experience hasn't been that good (and I'm very annoyed that jumpering is different between "single" and "master", so you have to change jumpers if you add or remove anything else on the cable. That alone disqualifies them as far as I'm concerned.
Seagates have just given me bad experiences more consistently than other brands. Their early 3" drives were the worst ever - I couldn't get them out the door before they failed.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
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Post #50,752
9/6/02 12:17:27 AM
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Re: All brands fail at a fairly high rate.
I exactly concur - early IBM SCSI tended to fail. I think IBM SCSI were actually made by Seagate. Seagates have failed more often than any other drives I can remember. The last of the Model 95s were sold with Maxtor SCSI drives.
BTW someone mentioned Quantum Atlas - these are now Maxtor Atlas (just bought one :).
Did you say IBM is giving up its disk business? Why?
Also exact same experience with those great Fujitsu tank drives (beige metal case). One interesting them about them - they seemed to ship with the write cache disabled. Adaptec Ez-SCSI could be used to turn it on, with dramatic effects.
-drl
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Post #50,768
9/6/02 2:48:18 AM
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Yes, IBM is dumping hard disks
Their hard disk business is going to a "joint venture" with Hitachi, but the implication was that IBM was not the major partner.
The stated reason is profitability, but I've also read about some stuff in IBM's labs that could obsolete hard disks. Perhaps it's a little farther along than recent articles have indicated.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
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Post #50,772
9/6/02 2:58:35 AM
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*Ulp*____What a nonsequitur___ stock assessment time?
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Post #50,821
9/6/02 10:33:26 AM
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Re: Yes, IBM is dumping hard disks
I still find it curious, because AFAIK IBM is mostly responsible for the basic magnetic materials and magneto-resistive head research that made giant drives possible. See this graphic:
<img src="[link|http://www.storage.ibm.com/hdd/ipl/oem/images/techimages/fig1.jpg"|http://www.storage....es/fig1.jpg"]>
-drl
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Post #50,609
9/5/02 10:51:24 AM
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Reminds me of an idiot...
There was a guy at Microsoft (don't all my "reminds me of an idiot" stories start that way?) who thought that the Seagate Cheetah was the best hard drive in the world. Never mind that they died 3 months after he bought them - he thought that it was great that they would keep sending him replacement hard drives!
Whotta idjit.
End of world rescheduled for day after tomorrow. Something should probably be done. Please advise.
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Post #50,610
9/5/02 10:57:50 AM
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Similar phenomenon
There was a guy at Microsoft (don't all my "reminds me of an idiot" stories start that way?) When I was tending bar in college, someone told me: All the best stories I've got of funny things that happened to me seem to start the same way: First I had six shots of Jose Cuervo, then me and my new friend ...
=== Microsoft offers them the one thing most business people will pay any price for - the ability to say "we had no choice - everyone's doing it that way." -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=38978|Andrew Grygus]
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