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Toshiba With Nearline SAS/SATA 3.5-Inch HDD at 5TB

With 5 platters, record capacity without helium

Toshiba Corporation announced nearline enterprise capacity HDDs with a 5TB recording capacity, the industry’s largest for models that are not filled with helium gas.

Toshiba 5TB HDD

Sample shipping of the MG04 series will start in the late half of February.

The SAS MG04SCA and SATA MG04ACA series, both with an interface speed of 6Gb/s, will be available in the 3.5-inch form factor.

The new series uses 1TB/platter (max.) magnetic disks to realize a capacity of 5TB and achieve an internal data transfer rate of 205MB/s, 24% faster than Toshiba’s current models, MG03SCA400 and MG03ACA400 (4TB, 165MB/s).

The series is engineered for the high-capacity demands of mid-tier servers and cloud application workloads, and for capacity-optimized data center storage systems that benefit from high capacity per spindle.

System builders have the option of selecting a Sanitize Devise Feature set function for each model, which makes it possible to invalidate important data recorded on the magnetic disks at a blink. The series also provides, as an option, Persistent Write Cache technologies that help protect against data-loss in the event of sudden power loss.

The new products are also halogen- and antimony-free and RoHS compatible.

     Outline of Products

    *Logical data block length: x=A, 4kB (fixed length), x=E,512B (emulation)Toshiba,5TB,HDD,mg04f1


SAS Models

Toshiba,5TB,HDD,mg04f2


SATA Models

Toshiba,5TB,HDD,mg04f3

Comments

After 4TB, what will be next standard in term of highest capacity HDDs, 5TB or 6TB?

HGST is now at 6TB with its innovative helium technology and Seagate is finally supposed to launch a 6TB unit in 2Q14, and not intermediary 5TB in 1Q14 as it was supposed.

If Toshiba is alone in 5TB, the company will be obliged to be very aggressive in pricing to compete with 6TB HDDs from its two other rivals.

Being only the third maker of hard disk drives, far behind WD/HGST and Seagate, we could doubt but the Japanese firm continues to invest seriously in this activity, as well as in SSDs.

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