HDDs with HAMR HD Density based Platters bring 80 TB HDDs on the horizon
The entire technology industry is always innovating and evolving. While for lower capacity and volume SSDs are your best option, for mass storage the HDD seems to stay around for a long time as companies still are actively developing their tech.
The latest technology development for HDD platters is coming from SDK Japanese company Showa Denko KK (SDK). Their High-Density HAMR technology is making use of something we've discussed a couple of time already, heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR), now updated allowing for way more density. The claim is now that 3.5-inch HDDs can reach capacities of 70 to 80 even TB.
HAMR represents a recording method in which magnetic film is locally heated at the time of recording. This technology has been developed to solve the “magnetic recording trilemma”: difficulty in simultaneously meeting the three requirements of fine-particle structure, resistance to thermal fluctuation, and ease of magnetization. Compared with the recording density of approx. 1.14 Tb/in2 for HD media based on conventional magnetic recording methods, it is said that HAMR-based HD media will achieve recording density of 5-6 Tb/in2 in the future. Provided that the same number of disks are used, it is estimated that a 3.5-inch HDD will achieve storage capacity of approx. 70-80 TB per unit.
The innovation here is based on a thin magnetic layer with an allow of iron and platinum, that created very small crystal particles on that platter, allowed to be written. The materials have another advantage, they can withstand heat quite well.
SDK make any bold claims in terms of specifications, but it does indicate that GAMR discs should be able to reach 5 to 6 Tb per square inch. Currently, that is 1.14 Tb per square inch. So the value that is easily quadrupled. It is uncertain if and when the new technology will go into production.
Sources: SDK via Hardware.info
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Interesting, thanks.
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I haven't touched a mechanical hard drive since 2015 and would never go back to using them. Your basic SATA SSD's are reasonably priced, plenty faster and with no moving parts inside them, less likely to skip (in a laptop) or break. And they run silent.
NVMe SSD's offer even better performance with insane speeds and now they're cheap enough to buy with decent capacities that you can use them as your main OS drive and for storage. They take up far less space too.
As always it depend your use right now i have 20 To of HDD and nearly full (and no it's not p*rn lol) at work i have twice this space...
It's impossible right now to have those capacity in NVMe SSD or even Sata SSD at a descent price, it only can be used for OS or cache (what i have on both system btw).
Then you have no other choise to use HDD.
I don't think (or atleast haven't seen any evidence of) HAMR drives coming in SATA interface.
Sata might be used too, lot of user still use it and don't have SAS system.
SAS is mostly used in server or video,and there is still workstation that only use the SATA to reduce the cost despite the huge benefit of a real controler.
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Ok, found some evidence of SMR being SATA compatible, but HAMR is an expansion of SMR
https://sata-io.org/developers/sata-ecosystem/shingled-magnetic-recording-boosting-capacity-and-lowering-costs
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80TB in one 3.5" drive using HAMR tech == I APPROVE

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These drives are seemingly designed so as not to fragment too.