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#1
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#2
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Is anyone here running a MAID system? Copan is the first one that comes to mind. I'm interested in experience with a dense HDD system that powers off and powers on the drives for use and occasional checking. In theory and concept this is a good thing, particularly with archive or even daily backups. Thanks. ~F |
#3
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I've never been able to understand how they can guarantee that a disk would power down and power back up with no problems whatsoever. |
#4
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I've never been able to understand how they can guarantee that a disk would power down and power back up with no problems whatsoever. Call me skeptical. On May 8, 2:56 pm, Faeandar <mr_casta... (AT) yahoo (DOT) com> wrote: Is anyone here running a MAID system? Copan is the first one that comes to mind. I'm interested in experience with a dense HDD system that powers off and powers on the drives for use and occasional checking. In theory and concept this is a good thing, particularly with archive or even daily backups. Thanks. ~F |
#5
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I've never been able to understand how they can guarantee that a disk would power down and power back up with no problems whatsoever. |
#6
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Furthermore, since many disks are rated for 50K start/stop cycles over their lifetime, they could be restarted every hour without exceeding their nominal specs. I wouldn't be surprised to see *some* increase in related failures if that were done, but starting them once every day or three should be a cakewalk (my impression is that Copan fires theirs up perhaps about once every week or three to 'exercise' them if other activity hasn't). |
#7
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On May 15, 7:59 pm, Bill Todd <billt... (AT) metrocast (DOT) net> wrote: Furthermore, since many disks are rated for 50K start/stop cycles over their lifetime, they could be restarted every hour without exceeding their nominal specs. I wouldn't be surprised to see *some* increase in related failures if that were done, but starting them once every day or three should be a cakewalk (my impression is that Copan fires theirs up perhaps about once every week or three to 'exercise' them if other activity hasn't). I don't know for sure, but I always thought they were powering the drives down to a sleep state, not power off. Powering up from there may well yield substantially less of a "power shock" that a real power on, particularly to the electronics. |
#8
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On 15 May 2007 00:06:14 -0700, Sandman <enjoylife_95... (AT) hotmail (DOT) com wrote: I've never been able to understand how they can guarantee that a disk would power down and power back up with no problems whatsoever. Call me skeptical. On May 8, 2:56 pm, Faeandar <mr_casta... (AT) yahoo (DOT) com> wrote: Is anyone here running a MAID system? Copan is the first one that comes to mind. I'm interested in experience with a dense HDD system that powers off and powers on the drives for use and occasional checking. In theory and concept this is a good thing, particularly with archive or even daily backups. Thanks. ~F Well, I power my laptop and desktop off and on several times a day. My laptop has bought the farm once and my desktop not at all. So I would say that some classes of drives are ok with this type of activity. And as Nik stated, they are not making the claim you are skeptical about. Just as HDS or NetApp or EMC will never claim none of their drives will fail, neither do MAID vendors. Given the market these vendors are targetting I see it as a viable option. Extreme density, low power and cooling requirements, and nearline response times. I'm guessing from the lack of responses to the original query that no one is actually using a MAID, yet. ~F |
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