Seagate is working on 30TB HDDs, 50 TB in 5 years and 100 TB by 2030
According to Seagate, heat-assisted magnetic recording hard disk drives (HAMR) are already in the works, a small number of consumers have been able to obtain the 20TB HAMR drives already, and a 30TB version is in the works.
Although there is no official release date for the 30TB Hamr (Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording) HDD, it is projected to arrive in 2023 or 2024, several years before the objective of a 50TB drive, which is set for 2026. These limited-edition hamr hard drives are meant particularly for "primary consumers" who want to become acquainted with the latest technologies. With the 30TB drive, the business is one step closer to achieving its 10-year objective of creating 100TB drives.
A while ago researchers have managed to increase the achievable data density tenfold with the help of graphene. Hard drives use a carbon-based overcoat to protect the platter from read and write heads and other factors. To increase storage capacity, manufacturers have reduced the space between the head and the platters. Today it is about 3 nanometers thick, which has increased the density to about 1 TB per square inch. The researchers replaced a coating with a variant of graphene, containing one to four layers of the material. After measuring corrosion, thermal stability, surface smoothness and lubricant handling, they concluded that graphene reduces friction by a factor of two and causes two and a half times less corrosion. Hamr heats the iron-platinum alloy platters to high temperatures that regular coatings cannot handle. Graphene in combination with hamr should be able to lead to a data density of about 10 TB per square inch.
Despite the fact that the vast majority of consumers now use solid-state drives (SSDs), the 'old-fashioned' hard disk is still in development. The use of graphene and hamr technology has the potential to enhance data density by a factor of a hundred. This is particularly appealing to consumers that want a big amount of storage, such as those who use data storage servers. Great-density hard disk drives (HDDs) are now less expensive per gigabyte than solid-state drives (SSDs), and because of their high data density, they may be around for a long time.
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Junior Member
Posts: 11
Joined: 2015-09-27
I moved from consumer HDD to Enterprise HDD due to exact same reason, consumer HDD can't do 6-7 years
Hope this Enterprise class that i got will hold around that same time you mentioned (WD GOLD, 3 of them)
Senior Member
Posts: 8265
Joined: 2020-08-03
I moved from consumer HDD to Enterprise HDD due to exact same reason, consumer HDD can't do 6-7 years
Hope this Enterprise class that i got will hold around that same time you mentioned (WD GOLD, 3 of them)
expensive and loud
it's hardly a solution im looking for
i just went for simply reducing operating time.instead of having it spin or turn off/on continuously I just plug it in and take it out.it's sitting just behind my monitor,can't see it or hear it (had to do some research to find a quiet drive tho,19db idle/21db working,couldn't find a quieter one).
it's not that bothersome as it might seem too.as long as it's tucked away from my sight and hearing.

(sorry for the cable mess,I don't care for it too much tho)
it's not the answer we need,but it's cost effective and extends life for sure.
Senior Member
Posts: 2198
Joined: 2007-01-16
i wish they made drives more durable.not just seagate,in general.
i got a ssd from 2014 and it's doing just fine,mechanical drives can't do 7 years these days.you'd be lucky with 6.
i really would like a 8/10tb,but not gonna invest that much in a piece of hardware that might die on me in 6-7 years.
I already moved my 2TB skyhawk 5400rpm into an external docking station,I only plug it in when I need to.I hope this will extend the life greatly.
My 4TB Western Digital Green drive is still alive and in use, got it in 2014. I did however mod the firmware to stop it from parking the heads every 8 seconds (disabled it entirely so rely on OS management). I also had a Seagate 1TB drive from 2013 that was in use up until 6 months ago (replaced with another 4TB drive). It is still working however.
Probably what's maintained the life of my drives is not having aggressive power savings enabled. For example I don't have them turning off after idling (I hate the delay caused when you access a drive that has turned off). I do however regularly turn my PC off when it is not in use.
The most interesting drive is my 250GB drive from 2005, Maxtor DiamondMax 10, still in use today living in my PlayStation 2.
I've never had a drive failure, if anything I've had SATA cables themselves fail. They seem to deteriorate over time (delayed write fail is the signature error I've encountered with SATA cables going bad).
Senior Member
Posts: 210
Joined: 2014-10-26
Im personally done with hdds, never going back.
Some reason i cant get my head around them using helium inside them for the large sizes, makes me paranoid that someday when it leaks out they will be useless,
I will stick to large nvme m.2 and sata ssds as long as there tlc or better and not that cheap qlc
Senior Member
Posts: 8265
Joined: 2020-08-03
i wish they made drives more durable.not just seagate,in general.
i got a ssd from 2014 and it's doing just fine,mechanical drives can't do 7 years these days.you'd be lucky with 6.
i really would like a 8/10tb,but not gonna invest that much in a piece of hardware that might die on me in 6-7 years.
I already moved my 2TB skyhawk 5400rpm into an external docking station,I only plug it in when I need to.I hope this will extend the life greatly.