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Guru3D.com » News » Backblaze Hard Drive Stats for 2017 - HGST HDDs Very Reliable

Backblaze Hard Drive Stats for 2017 - HGST HDDs Very Reliable

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 02/02/2018 10:13 AM | source: | 35 comment(s)
Backblaze Hard Drive Stats for 2017 - HGST HDDs Very Reliable

Backblaze has recorded and saved daily hard drive statistics from the drives in their data centers and released the statistics for the year 2017. At the end of 2017 they had 93,240 spinning hard drives. Of that number, there were 1,935 boot drives and 91,305 data drives

Below are the lifetime hard drive failure statistics for the hard drive models that were operational at the end of Q4 2017. As with the quarterly results above, Backblaze have removed any non-production drives and any models that had fewer than 45 drives. First the Q4 results:

 

 

The disks of with a large number in use and that have dropout a percentages above two percent, are the Seagate ST12000NM0007 with a failure rate of 2.01 percent, the Western Digital WD60EFRX, with a failure rate of 3.66 percent and the Seagate ST4000DM000, with a failure rate of 2.89 percent.

The failure rate for each year is calculated for just that year. In looking at the results the following observations can be made:

  • The failure rates for both of the 6 TB models, Seagate and WDC, have decreased over the years while the number of drives has stayed fairly consistent from year to year.
  • While it looks like the failure rates for the 3 TB WDC drives have also decreased, you’ll notice that we migrated out nearly 1,000 of these WDC drives in 2017. While the remaining 180 WDC 3 TB drives are performing very well, decreasing the data set that dramatically makes trend analysis suspect.
  • The Toshiba 5 TB model and the HGST 8 TB model had zero failures over the last year. That’s impressive, but with only 45 drives in use for each model, not statistically useful.
  • The HGST/Hitachi 4 TB models delivered sub 1.0% failure rates for each of the three years. Amazing.

A Few More Numbers

To save you countless hours of looking, we’ve culled through the data to uncover the following tidbits regarding our ever changing hard drive farm.

  • 116,833 — The number of hard drives for which we have data from April 2013 through the end of December 2017. Currently there are 91,305 drives (data drives) in operation. This means 25,528 drives have either failed or been removed from service due for some other reason — typically migration.
  • 29,844 — The number of hard drives that were installed in 2017. This includes new drives, migrations, and failure replacements.
  • 81.76 — The number of hard drives that were installed each day in 2017. This includes new drives, migrations, and failure replacements.
  • 95,638 — The number of drives installed since we started keeping records in April 2013 through the end of December 2017.
  • 55.41 — The average number of hard drives installed per day from April 2013 to the end of December 2017. The installations can be new drives, migration replacements, or failure replacements.
  • 1,508 — The number of hard drives that were replaced as failed in 2017.
  • 4.13 — The average number of hard drives that have failed each day in 2017.
  • 6,795 — The number of hard drives that have failed from April 2013 until the end of December 2017.
  • 3.94 — The average number of hard drives that have failed each day from April 2013 until the end of December 2017.


Backblaze Hard Drive Stats for 2017 - HGST HDDs Very Reliable Backblaze Hard Drive Stats for 2017 - HGST HDDs Very Reliable Backblaze Hard Drive Stats for 2017 - HGST HDDs Very Reliable




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Koniakki
Senior Member



Posts: 2843
Joined: 2009-09-15

#5516724 Posted on: 02/03/2018 05:24 AM
It's not what people do with their HDDs. If there is a high 10% failure rate, it still means that 90% of the people do not run into an issue short term. Apparently, you are amongst the lucky ones. A year or two ago I had a Seagate in my NAS, 8 TB. I decided to die after a few weeks of operation. I got an RMA replacement for it, after a month or so .. again gone. 3rd replacement works like a charm now (but don't let me jinx myself) :)


I got 2 of them boss! I'm crossing fingers and toes too, for both of us! :p

Venix
Senior Member



Posts: 2842
Joined: 2016-08-01

#5516728 Posted on: 02/03/2018 05:52 AM
had 3xwb 750gb years back all 3 dead on arrival ... click click grrrrrr click click ...dead ...all 3 of em ...and now my bios screaming to backup and replace my wd Blue due to S.M.A.R.T. diagnosis 1tb i have since 2011 or 12 , although already backed up what i wanted from it about a month ago since it suddenly started disappearing from my computer every now and then . hard drives are the luck of the draw most likely over the years you will have a drive at least that will fail no way around that

b101uk
Senior Member



Posts: 222
Joined: 2003-10-29

#5516744 Posted on: 02/03/2018 08:27 AM
As of October 2015 HGST is completely owned by WD. HGST is no longer a separate entity. They had a period of 2 years after they were bought by WD to keep releasing products with the HGST brand stamp but this period is over now. HGST is fully owned and absorbed by WD now. The HGST stickers mean nothing as they are a WD company now.


being wholly owned by WD still doesn't stop it being an entreaty within WD with a degree of autonomy, with its own board concerned with running HGST and its own QA and dedicated facilities etc.

the world is full of companies that are wholly own by larger enteritis and still operate with a degree of autonomy and their financial liabilities separated from the parent company and have their own products and keep their intellectual properties separate and cross licence them with the parent company.

its basic business.

0blivious
Senior Member



Posts: 3268
Joined: 2006-04-25

#5516745 Posted on: 02/03/2018 08:28 AM
I've had drives from every MFG fail on me over the course of about 30 years. To be honest, WD has never seemed much/any better than Seagate. The numbers in these charts look that way too.

Maxtor can go straight to he|| though.

nizzen
Senior Member



Posts: 2271
Joined: 2005-08-05

#5516843 Posted on: 02/03/2018 04:53 PM
notice they have 45 HGST HDD's compared to the rest it's not enough to say they're better than the rest

... 10 000+ 4TB hgst...

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