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lycan1917 | 17 days ago

As explained at https://www.backblaze.com/blog/backblaze-drive-stats-for-q3-..., a large proportion of Backblaze's Seagate inventory are rather old drives for a datacenter (now 5-9 years in service), so a high failure rate is expected.

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metadat|17 days ago

I have quantum fireball from 2000, so 26 years old, still going strong.

5 years doesn't seem that long for a drive that cost hundreds of dollars! Persistence is the point.

Just wondering why Seagate seems like the bottom of the barrel in the longevity department. Western Digital drives seem to fail a lot less frequently on average in this dataset and in my life experience.

To Seagate's credit, I do have 8x24TB drives that have been working fine for the past 4 years. Hopefully can last a few more until the compute hardware shortages pass.

dpacmittal|17 days ago

That's a brand I haven't heard of in a long time. I had a 8gb HDD from the brand in 2000 until my sister kicked the computer case out of frustration which ended up shorting some chips on the drive. I mourned the loss of my music collection for quite a long time.

hypercube33|17 days ago

Well, I have a 200mb maxtor IDE works just fine to this day.

ProllyInfamous|17 days ago

I used a 1.2gb Fireball for my main drive around that era — it is so comically loud!.

rasz|17 days ago

Only expected if its Seagate. Backblaze Hitachi drives had miniscule failure rates thru their whole life cycle.