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Shingled Magnetic Recording drives have a bad name, and rightly so if you need to write continuously for more than a couple of minutes, because the firmware just can't cope and frequently grinds to a halt for a few seconds. As someone who always buys NAS HDD's for their longevity and durability (Toshiba N300's are my poison), and uses RAID as a matter of course, that simply isn't acceptable.
However, I came across four unwanted Seagate Barracuda 2Tb HDD's in a cupboard and thought it would be fun to see how they ran as a four spindle RAID 0 array; after all, these are 7200rpm drives with a 256MB buffer. So, duly attached to an Adaptec 7805, I gave them a whirl. And the results were surprising.
On a sustained I Tb video file transfer (average size 500 MB), settling down at 380-390 MB/sec after the initial rush; by way of comparison my Toshiba's run at 860-880 MB/sec. But reversing the copy was illuminating. the Seagate's read the data back at 830-840 MB/sec, which is pretty much as fast as the Toshiba's write, 840-850 MB/sec.
So assuming you have adequate backups, this would offer a significantly cheaper way of fulfilling a write once, read many, requirement. for non critical data.
I also repeated this test over a 10Gbs network, and the Seagates ran at 770 MB/sec read / 330 MB/sec write, while the Toshiba's posted 790-810 MB/sec read/ 750-780 MB/sec write.
Lastly, I tested the Seagates copying the same data to a Seagate Firecuda 530 SSD 4Tb, and 830-840 MB/sec read seems to be read their limit. Needs more work, but SMR HDD's may actually have a use after all.
However, I came across four unwanted Seagate Barracuda 2Tb HDD's in a cupboard and thought it would be fun to see how they ran as a four spindle RAID 0 array; after all, these are 7200rpm drives with a 256MB buffer. So, duly attached to an Adaptec 7805, I gave them a whirl. And the results were surprising.
On a sustained I Tb video file transfer (average size 500 MB), settling down at 380-390 MB/sec after the initial rush; by way of comparison my Toshiba's run at 860-880 MB/sec. But reversing the copy was illuminating. the Seagate's read the data back at 830-840 MB/sec, which is pretty much as fast as the Toshiba's write, 840-850 MB/sec.
So assuming you have adequate backups, this would offer a significantly cheaper way of fulfilling a write once, read many, requirement. for non critical data.
I also repeated this test over a 10Gbs network, and the Seagates ran at 770 MB/sec read / 330 MB/sec write, while the Toshiba's posted 790-810 MB/sec read/ 750-780 MB/sec write.
Lastly, I tested the Seagates copying the same data to a Seagate Firecuda 530 SSD 4Tb, and 830-840 MB/sec read seems to be read their limit. Needs more work, but SMR HDD's may actually have a use after all.