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Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : HDD's now up to 24TB per drive...
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Grogster![]() Admin Group ![]() Joined: 31/12/2012 Location: New ZealandPosts: 9574 |
Impressive. LINK... Planning to get one of these, to put ALL of my media on. I have the old drives, and serveral other older backups, so I would NOT be relying on this ONE drive to stay alive, if you know what I mean. ![]() But this would allow me to PHYSICALLY downsize my current NAS, to a much smaller box, with everything being on the one drive. I can already hear some of you saying how bad an idea this is - having that much on a single volume, but please remember - I have multiple redundant backups of what I would be putting on this drive, so I feel I am covered. ![]() Smoke makes things work. When the smoke gets out, it stops! |
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Bryan1![]() Guru ![]() Joined: 22/02/2006 Location: AustraliaPosts: 1403 |
over a grand each eh no thanks in 6 months they will be a quarter of the price |
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Grogster![]() Admin Group ![]() Joined: 31/12/2012 Location: New ZealandPosts: 9574 |
Yes, but that could have been said of ANY new capacity drive over time. I remember paying $250 for my first 256MB flash drive. I remember paying $500 or so, for my first 20GB HDD. Not sure I agree that 24TB drives will be 25% of that price in six months.... Smoke makes things work. When the smoke gets out, it stops! |
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JohnS Guru ![]() Joined: 18/11/2011 Location: United KingdomPosts: 4023 |
Thankfully I didn't have to pay for the fixed disk I first used but it was lots of money and a whole 64K in size! John |
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Mixtel90![]() Guru ![]() Joined: 05/10/2019 Location: United KingdomPosts: 7784 |
It cost me a lot of money for a twin floppy drive for my Tandy Model 1, never mind a hard disk! I had to buy the Expansion Interface first as that incorporated the disk control circuit. I didn't get a hard drive until I got an Atari ST. That needed yet another box to convert the ST port to work with the hard drive. That's been the only hard drive that I've had mechanically fail, losing everything. IIRC it was only 40MB, 50MB or something like that and probably fairly old when I got it from a radio rally. Mick Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs |
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mclout999 Guru ![]() Joined: 05/07/2020 Location: United StatesPosts: 487 |
I remember paying over $1000 for a 5 megabyte 75lb External hard drive for my model 1 TRS-80. I wanted to run a BBS and did for a while. I forgot what interface it used. It was like wang or something like that drive. I cannot remember what the heck it was. |
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stanleyella![]() Guru ![]() Joined: 25/06/2022 Location: United KingdomPosts: 2507 |
hdd drives have been poo pooed for years but the 2TB I bought from Maplin still works. more than I can say about ssd drives |
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Mixtel90![]() Guru ![]() Joined: 05/10/2019 Location: United KingdomPosts: 7784 |
They are still the second best system for keeping backups. The best is still tape! Mick Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs |
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tgerbic Regular Member ![]() Joined: 25/07/2019 Location: United StatesPosts: 63 |
I suspect the price will come down as it always does. I have also seen 26T drives recently. For me, 24T seems just too much for me at this point. I find it better to just move generally unused data off the drives completely to clear out space. I can always reload it later if needed. I am currently running two 12T drives in one machine (one, normally powered down, backup for the other) for data. So much better than four 6T drives for data and data backup. Plus a pair of 3T for OS (and backup image/complete boot drive) and additional photo backups. Then I have a duplicate machine that is kept powered off unless I am updating it. Overkill? Probably. Recent drives seem to last forever. I usually only pull them when I get bigger drives, but I assume one will die at some point. Old drives, 3T and 4T, are good for backing up older files and putting in another room. Something that I don't see mentioned is virus checking. I remember copying about 10T to my old XP machine, dual core 3.7Ghz and SATA drives, and trying to run a full Mcafee virus check on the computer. Took nearly a week running 24 hours a day. It was an interesting test but I would not want to try it again. |
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Mixtel90![]() Guru ![]() Joined: 05/10/2019 Location: United KingdomPosts: 7784 |
The trouble is, with drives that size the only really safe way to use them is as two identical drives in a mirrored RAID system. You can't risk anything non-mirrored because that's a hell of a lot of data. That only protects against disk failure. On top of that you need at least the same capacity as backup, although that can be on multiple smaller drives and/or tapes. A pretty healthy bank account appears to be necessary. :) Mick Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs |
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EDNEDN Senior Member ![]() Joined: 18/02/2023 Location: United StatesPosts: 136 |
Yes. Both thoughts are correct. But an additional thought is this: Any time you move to the latest and greatest disk technology you are asking for problems because the technology isn't well shaken out yet. Unless you have a very pressing need to move to the latest and greatest available, you are asking for and should expect some problems. |
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