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HGST Enterprise 12Gb SAS SSD Up to 1.6TB

Using Intel 20nm MLC

HGST, Inc., a Western Digital company (WDC), announced its next-generation of Ultrastar 12Gb SAS SSD with capacities up to 1.6TB.

HGST Enterprise 12Gb SAS SSD

Building upon its first generation 12Gb SAS SSDs, the new Ultrastar SSD800MH.B, Ultrastar SSD1600MM and Ultrastar SSD1600MR are building blocks for server and storage systems running today’s performance-sensitive enterprise applications.  

The Ultrastar SAS SSDs create new price/performance points by combining HGST’s enterprise storage expertise developed over the last 50 years, customer-proven 12Gb SAS technology and Intel’s 20nm high endurance enterprise-grade MLC NAND memory. As a result, the Ultrastar SAS SSDs excel in TCO metrics for enterprise applications, including transactions/$ and transactions/watt.

The family supports applications requiring fast and reliable storage, such as online transaction processing, cloud computing, online gaming, and big data analytics.

Its features and benefits include:

  • Enterprise write endurance – Three options to balance write endurance, write performance, and cost: Ultrastar SSD800MH.B with 25 full random drive writes per day (DW/D), for five years, Ultrastar SSD1600MM with 10 DW/D, and Ultrastar SSD1600MR for read-intensive applications.
  • Product reliability – Continuing HGST’s track record in enterprise storage quality with a reliability specification of 2 million hours MTBF and a five-year limited warranty.
  • Range of capacities – Available in capacities of 250GB to 1.6TB for the read-intensive Ultrastar SSD1600MR, 200GB to 1.6TB for the mainstream endurance Ultrastar SSD1600MM, and 100GB to 800GB for the high endurance Ultrastar SSD800MH.B.
  • High performance – Supports throughputs of up to 1,100 MB/s along with random read and random write performance of up to 130,000 and 110,000 IO/s, respectively.
  • Choice of security options – A set of data security options including Instant Secure Erase (ISE), Self-Encrypting Drives (SED), and TCG enterprise SED with FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standard) 140-2 certification.

HGST leads the industry in SAS SSDs, which continue to be the preferred storage building blocks for a large variety of server and storage systems that support a growing set of data-intensive enterprise applications,” said Ulrich Hansen, VP of SSD product marketing, HGST. “As our OEM, cloud and enterprise customers implement solutions to meet a variety of storage needs, SSDs and HDDs will increasingly be deployed in tiered pools of storage based on respective TCO strengths. HGST is in a unique position of offering a complete enterprise storage portfolio with leading solutions in both product categories.”

The adoption of Intel 20nm enterprise-grade MLC NAND illustrates the commitment of both companies to continue to develop outstanding performance and endurance in the Ultrastar SAS SSD family,” said Rob Crooke, VP and GM of Intel’s non-volatile memory solutions group. “With the new HGST Ultrastar SAS SSD family, customers are offered higher performance and the ability to develop a broad range of application acceleration solutions.”

Since 2008, HGST and Intel have worked to develop SAS SSDs by combining HGST’s enterprise storage experience with Intel’s NAND flash expertise.

The new HGST Ultrastar SSD800MH.B, Ultrastar SSD1600MM and Ultrastar SSD1600MR SAS SSDs are completing qualifications at several server and storage system OEMs, and are available.

Comments

Which one OEMs will prefer: this new SSD up to 1.6TB or the most recent 10,000rpm Ultrastar C10K1800 HDD at 1.8TB, both of them enterprise units with 12Gb SAS - and no more FC - and in the same 2.5-inch form factor?

The choice will depend on application but also a key spec not revealed by HGST for thee two drives: the price.

Sales reps from the storage manufacturer will prefer to push the silicon or the mechanical device to their clients? We assume that HGST has better margins on HDDs because the company is totally vertically integrated for these products. It's not the case for SDDs where the more expansive components, the enterprise-grade 20nm flash chips - previously 25nm -, are acquired from Intel. Others HDD makers, Seagate or WD, parent company of HGST, have the same problem. But not Toshiba, manufacturing its own flash chips.

Other question is: will HGST continues into 15,000rpm enterprise HDDs, the SAS Ultrastar C15K600 and 15K600 at a maximum capacity of 600GB, being even a more severe competitor for the news SSDs?

HGST also have a line of 2.5-inch SAS SSDs up to 2TB with the s841 and s842.

According to our source, other companies making SAS SSDs are:

  • Micron up to 400GB
  • OCZ up to 1TB
  • SanDisk up to 4TB
  • Samsung up to 800GB
  • Seagate up to 800GB
  • SMART Storage Systems up to 2TB
  • Toshiba up to 1.6TB
  • Viking Modular Solutions up to 400GB

 

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