- Mar 27, 2009
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I found the following post from Jul 2016 with a report about Seagate recommending against RAID for FireCuda:
http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-3139762/seagate-firecuda-drives-raid.html
And here back in July 2017:
https://www.reddit.com/r/pcmasterrace/comments/6j1vrk/seagate_firecudaraid_questions/
(With this noted I was not able to find any specific mention of RAID in the FireCUDA product manual--> http://www.seagate.com/support/internal-hard-drives/desktop-hard-drives/firecuda-3-5/ )
I also noticed Seagate still has NAND in their enterprise SAS Hard drives announced Oct. 2016 (which I know would be used in RAID):
https://www.anandtech.com/show/1072...rprise-performance-15k-hdds-with-nand-caching
???
http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-3139762/seagate-firecuda-drives-raid.html
And here back in July 2017:
https://www.reddit.com/r/pcmasterrace/comments/6j1vrk/seagate_firecudaraid_questions/
(With this noted I was not able to find any specific mention of RAID in the FireCUDA product manual--> http://www.seagate.com/support/internal-hard-drives/desktop-hard-drives/firecuda-3-5/ )
I also noticed Seagate still has NAND in their enterprise SAS Hard drives announced Oct. 2016 (which I know would be used in RAID):
https://www.anandtech.com/show/1072...rprise-performance-15k-hdds-with-nand-caching
The new Seagate Enterprise Performance 15K v6 HDDs come in 300, 600 and 900 GB configurations. Just like their predecessors, they use a dual port SAS 12 Gbps interface as well as a 2.5”/15 mm form-factor. The new Enterprise Performance 15K v6 hard drives have single or dual level caches: either a 256 MB of DRAM cache only or a 256 MB of DRAM cache and a 16 GB of NAND flash cache (4Kn/512E models only). The latter is used for caching of frequently used “hot” data to maximize read performance and reduce latencies (Seagate offers similar capability with its consumer-grade FireCuda and other SSHDs). It is noteworthy that Seagate reduced the amount of NAND flash compared to previous-generation 15K HDDs, but the company seems to believe that its improved caching algorithms will ensure that the new drives are faster than their predecessors.
When compared to predecessors, the new sixth-generation 15K HDDs are rated for a 27% increase in sequential read write speed: up to 315 MB/s. In addition, the drives also promise 100% faster random write performance. Seagate claims that its advanced caching algorithms promote hot data three times faster when compared to 512N drives without NAND, but it does not reveal exact performance numbers for its NAND cache.
???