Deluge (Jan 27 2010) |
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Message boards : Technical News : Deluge (Jan 27 2010)
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As predicted, the science secondary did indeed catch up to the primary again, so all's well on that front (for now). And in case anybody noticed, we quickly turned the splitters/assimilators off for a bit to replace the failing drive on thumper - something we planned to do during the outage yesterday but couldn't. Easy squeasy - I'm glad we pay for Sun service on that system as drives are going fast. I can safely say the rumors that SATA drives fail frequently are true. | |
| ID: 966228 · | |
You mean all brands of SATA drives?! Or are they just Western Digital? What brand/model/capacity? I don't think Seagate will "fail frequently". ____________ - ALF - "Find out what you don't do well ..... then don't do it!" :) | |
| ID: 966379 · | |
I don't have any problems with WD. True, I've seen a lot of comments on newegg about some batches that are prone to premature failure, but out of the 50+ that I've bought in the past 7 years, I've only had one failure, and it was in a raid5, so I didn't lose anything. ____________ Linux laptop uptime: 1484d 22h 42m Ended due to UPS failure, found 14 hours after the fact | |
| ID: 966410 · | |
I've had nothing but problems with WD. Out of the two dozen I've owned over the years (from giving them another try, or because they were given to me), every single one of them has failed. On every system I've worked on, it has always been a WD when it's a hard drive failure (once it was a Fujitsu, but that is the only other HDD to have died). This is all normal use, non-RAID systems. By comparison, I still have some Conner 80MB and Maxtor 400MB HDDs in use that work flawlessly. ____________ | |
| ID: 966428 · | |
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The drives in thumper are Hitachis. That's what Sun chose to use. I'll never touch WDs or Maxtors for heavy production use. | |
| ID: 966439 · | |
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I've had 1 hitachi and it didnt last a year. So that does fit with the high fail rate I guess | |
| ID: 966440 · | |
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| ID: 966442 · | |
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Google published the results of a study they did with 100,000 some odd of their hard drives. The report vaguely indicates that the manufacture doesn't seems to have any influence in the failures. I'd guess they didn't name any manufactures so they wouldn't have to show any preferences towards a specific brand. | |
| ID: 966443 · | |
Once upon a time, there were the Deathstars. IBM didn't talk much about the reasoning, I personally suspect that it had more to do with how they coated the magnetic media on the (glass) platters than the intended use: http://www.astro.ufl.edu/~ken/crash/index.html The real problem was trying to make the warranty problem going away by "redefining" the warranty -- and sales suffered because it was easier to avoid all IBM drives than it was to avoid the specific troublesome deathstar models. The short version of the story is that as a result, IBM chose to leave the hard disk market, and sold their drive business and manufacturing plants -- to Hitachi. ____________ | |
| ID: 966529 · | |
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Yep. Seta in my acer croaked and I was offline for awhile. didn't make it 2 years. Level 55 on diablo2 lost. Back it up. What kind of beer did ya'll get? | |
| ID: 966746 · | |
The report vaguely indicates that the manufacture doesn't seems to have any influence in the failures.I think over the years every major manufacturer has had a bad patch or three. If you have the bad luck to get several drives out of a problem distribution, you'll have dreadful results, and may latch a permanent aversion to the manufacturer concerned. Other folks, who happen to have sampled other bad portions, will naturally have grossly different opinions, held with equal fervor (and equal lack of adequate data). I think the same Google study found drives marketed as "enterprise grade" not to do better either--but that won't stop people with a favorable experience on a tiny number of drives from fervently maintaining their vast superiority. Unless you like to buy obsolete drives, and take the trouble somehow to accumulate vast field experience in the specific model and batch in advance, it is pretty hard to claim data based decision making on hard drive selection for reliability. Disclosure: For four years of my varied electronics career I was a reliability professional--but it was at a semiconductor company, not a hard drive place. I did, on the other hand, play in a small recorder ensemble with a QA guy for Quantum, but that was so long ago that they not only built their own drives, but actually built them in California, so it really does not count. ____________ | |
| ID: 966780 · | |
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Alert! the "Workunits waiting for db purging" is over .5 million and the "Results waiting for db purging" are approaching 1.2 million. Both figures are unusually high, in my experience... | |
| ID: 967309 · | |
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regarding the hdd discussion i am always a mixing fan so i use harddrives from every major manufacturer. best solution imho combined with random backups and offsite data&drive storage . | |
| ID: 967394 · | |
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yeah i have had 2 wd(1 died of a bt bug) and 1 seagate die on me. it the batches just like cpu,ram,blank media. | |
| ID: 967667 · | |
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I have had 4 drives fail over the last 25 years. In two of the cases I discovered that the manufacturer was no longer in business. One was apparently done in by a hurricane in Florida, and one was done by quality control issues. They sent out drives that lasted about 4 to 8 hours before failure. I got two of those (not counted in the total as I had not gotten the OS installed from the stack of floppies when they failed). When the drive from them that finally did work failed 3 years later, the company was no longer to supply a replacement under their 5 year warranty... | |
| ID: 967828 · | |
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Something appears to be wrong with the Gigabiteathernet site: | |
| ID: 967837 · | |
Something appears to be wrong with the Gigabiteathernet site: It looks more like the data collector isn't getting data from the router. Since that site is run by berkeleys IT department for their use. I'm sure they will work on it if they feel the need to. ____________ SETI@home classic workunits: 93,865 CPU time: 863,447 hours Join the BP6/VP6 User Group today! | |
| ID: 967843 · | |
Something appears to be wrong with the Gigabiteathernet site: I just tried looking at a few other routers randomly from that site. It looks like they have data problems with all of them for the same period, so it is not just SETI or SSL that is affected. | |
| ID: 967923 · | |
Message boards : Technical News : Deluge (Jan 27 2010)
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