Wednesday, January 13th 2016

Seagate Unveils 10TB Helium Enterprise Hard Drive

Seagate Technology plc, a world leader in storage solutions, today launched its first 10TB enterprise capacity hard disk drive (HDD), merging high capacity with the industry's lowest power and weight available in a 10TB drive, to meet the growing storage requirements for private and public cloud-based data centers. The Seagate Enterprise 3.5 Capacity HDD has been selected by enterprise market leaders globally for its ability to address storage demands unlike any other technology in the industry.

"Cloud-based data center storage needs are expanding faster than many current infrastructures can sustain, rendering the capacity demands of users a herculean task for cloud managers," said Mark Re, senior vice president and chief technology officer, Seagate. "Built on our years of research and development of sealed-drive technology, our new helium-based enterprise drive is designed precisely to help data-centric organizations worldwide solve the needs of their growing storage business."
"With the amount of data today growing at an increasingly rapid rate, we are always on the lookout for storage solutions that offer better performance with lower overhead," said Fan Ruiqi, president of storage products at Huawei. "The new Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD from Seagate helps us meet these demands by offering incredible capacity with improvements in power and weight allowing us to drastically reduce our costs."

The new, robust 10TB Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD provides maximum storage capacity for easy system integration by using the standard 3.5-inch CMR design. Incorporating seven platters and 14 heads, the drive seals in helium to create a turbulence-free, quiet environment, decreasing both friction and resistance on the platters and delivering the industry's lowest power/TB ratio and weight specifications for a 10TB HDD. Offering 25 percent more density to help businesses dramatically increase petabytes per rack, the drive delivers higher performance and reduced power and weight.

"More and more data centers are being put into operation as a result of data growing at an exponential rate. With this in mind, we are laser focused on lowering our TCO and confident the new Seagate Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD can help us with this endeavor," said Li Shu, senior expert technical support for storage and research and development, at Alibaba. "We value the drives winning combination of higher storage capacities, increased performance and low power consumption- making it a win-win for both us and our customers."

"At-scale data centers are faced with the challenge of efficiently storing massive amounts of unstructured digital data," said John Rydning, IDC's research vice president for hard disk drives. "Seagate's new 10TB HDD for enterprise data centers is its first product to employ helium technology and will help data center customers to expand storage capacity economically."

The Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD improves performance by using advanced caching algorithms to help cloud data center managers manage the increasing volume of data more quickly. Featuring Seagate's PowerChoice technology, the drive helps businesses manage and reduce the ongoing costs associated with power and cooling during idle time, while Seagate's PowerBalance feature helps optimize the IOPS/Watt for even more efficiency.

It delivers an improved MTBF of 2.5 million hours and provides consistent performance to customers in a 24x7 multi-drive environment. Enterprise ready, the Seagate Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD is available in both a 6Gb/s SATA and 12Gb/s SAS interfaces.

The new Seagate Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD 10TB is now shipping to select customers worldwide.
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12 Comments on Seagate Unveils 10TB Helium Enterprise Hard Drive

#1
Steevo
They should send me three to test...... for long term testing.
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#2
xvi
I also need three for long-term testing. People need to see reliability tests performed by independent reviewers and us TPUers would clearly be the best to handle that testing. *convincing nod*
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#3
Fx
Cool. Now maybe HGST's drive prices will come down.
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#4
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
5 please, with a 1TB SSD of course
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#5
PP Mguire
I just want 10TB SSDs to give me an excuse to expand my 10Gb.
Posted on Reply
#7
alucasa
And meanwhile 2.5 inch HDD seems to stuck at 2TB for years.
Posted on Reply
#8
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
I would like a full size PCI-E SSD that doesn't break the bank for some half-reasonable size. I don't even get close to filling my 3TB on my RAID, so what is 10 going to get me? I want cheaper fast storage not more mass storage. I'm sure companies that warehouse data will love this though.
Posted on Reply
#9
HumanSmoke
AquinusI would like a full size PCI-E SSD that doesn't break the bank for some half-reasonable size. I don't even get close to filling my 3TB on my RAID, so what is 10 going to get me? I want cheaper fast storage not more mass storage. I'm sure companies that warehouse data will love this though.
High capacity storage drives are a blessing for some of us. Backing up a Blu Ray collection (native resolution, full audio) can chew through capacity pretty quickly. 2 and 3TB HDD's now are the new 500GB/1TB - i.e. entry level, cheap (and very cheap secondhand from those upgrading NAS and games drives). I have a stack of 4TB and 6TB WD Red's that I wouldn't mind consolidating into a fewer high capacity drives - although I'll likely pass on any SMR (Shingled) drive. They tend to be very slow with large data blocks.
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#11
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
lmao, I have no use for these. not even filling up the 1TB Velociraptor i got
Posted on Reply
#12
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
when SSD's are at 4TB in 2.5" sizes and mechanicals are in 10TB 3.5"... why do i feel like we're starting to see the first decline of the mechanical hard drives?
Posted on Reply
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