Seagate going for 18TB HDDS next year
Seagate will be expanding their HDD line with an 18 Terabyte model, and would be doing so next year. To reach this incredible storage volume they would make a move towards SMR, TDMR and HAMR technologies.
The news was posted by through fudzilla who had a chat with senior executives familiar with Seagate’s research and development plans, the company plans to fine-tune the next three years of its HDD developments using shingled magnetic recording (SMR), two-dimensional magnetic recording (TDMR), and heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR):
The need for higher capacity drives, especially for lots of unstructured data in server environments, have produced a need to develop more efficient drive recording technologies. Perpendicular magnetic recording (PMR) was introduced in 2005 and brought needed areal density decreases. Then in 2013, Seagate began shipping the first shingled magnetic recording (SMR) drives that increased overall disk capacity by about 25 percent over non-shingled storage. The company is now confirming plans to release nearline HDDs with 12TB capacity within the coming weeks or months. Market watchers expect that once SMR-based technology begins to mature, the drives will be able to replace PMR-based drives most frequently and at capacities of almost double what PMR has been able to provide. According to company executives, 18TB SMR drives are currently in development and are expected to make an arrival in 2018.
TDMR drives arriving next quarterAnother technology currently under development, two-dimensional magnetic recording (TDMR), will also help the company increase areal density by around 5 to 10 percent. As tracks get narrower, an effect called magnetic inter-track interference (ITI) makes it increasingly hard for heads to perform read operations. TDMR uses two or more heads to read data from several earby tracks at the same time, improving the overall signal-to-noise ratio delivered to the controller. By using an array of readers per head, there should also be a noticeable performance improvement for HDDs, even if not quite on the same level as SSDs. With TDMR, however, the array of heads increases bandwidth requirements for the controller along with the amount of information it needs to process, so these platforms may initially come at a slight cost premium. Seagate plans to have some of the first drives introduced next quarter.
16TB HAMR HDDs arriving next year
Now that PMR technology has gone through several generations, there is only so much room left in bits per square inch before a new read-write head technology must be developed to accommodate smaller surface areas. Seagate describes SMR as a stop gap recording technology, where reads can be made smaller, but write heads cannot. The downside is that if data has to be rewritten, then track blocks have to be reconstructed, which takes time and lengthens disk write performance.
This is where heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) comes into play, as it allows the drive heads to be made smaller to match the read tracks. A new and more stable recording medium is used that allows for writing on materials with higher coercivity and smaller grain size.
While PMR drives have an areal density of a few hundred gigabits per square inch, HAMR drives will be capable of delivering 5TB per square inch. As of 2016, no hard drives on the market were using HAMR, but Seagate expects the first 16TB HAMR HDDs to make an arrival in 2018 at the earliest.
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Senior Member
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18,000,000,000,000 / 1024 ^ 4 = ~16.37
The reduced size has nothing to do with the file table, you actually get that much less.
18 "terabytes" in SI units is 16.37 real/binary terabytes. And I refuse to call it a tebibyte or whatever the **** unit was agreed upon to represent binary. Screw that, that means the companies win, no, not happening.
Edit: Check for yourselves with any drive, check how many bytes it has and divide by 1024 ^ 3 for gigabytes or 1024 ^ 4 for terabytes.
For example, my "4TB" Seagate drive has a (relative) bit over 4 trillion bytes: 4,000,785,100,800 / 1024 ^ 4 = just under 3.64 TB, which is what Windows displays.
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I still remember buying a '40GB' deathstar HD and seeing only 37GB available, I imagine it'd be pretty harsh with an 18TB drive O_o Amazes me how much they keep cramming into these drives via magneto-mechanical means, in rust we trust for bulk storage.
Can't see myself buying one though, cost aside, infact I first bought a 1TB drive back in 2008 IIRC, and 9 years later I'm still using 1 or 2TB drives for things not needed on the ssd :/
Well, it should be something like 17.57TB in real TB (meaning divided by 1024 and not 1000 as they usually advertise). Then you subtract 12.5% from that for the NTFS Master File Table. So that should show something like 15.38TB on "My Computer".