Soundtweaker
n00b
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2009
- Messages
- 20
Looks like Newegg is out of 4TB drives except for enterprise class drive.
Could they be clearing room for 5 TB drives soon?
Could they be clearing room for 5 TB drives soon?
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Newegg is out of stock because the only internal 4TB drive that wasn't the Ultrastar was the 5K4000 (and it is eol). 5TB and larger drives haven't even been announced let alone shipped and with things the way they are I don't see any reason they will trot them out any time soon.
There's also a 7K4000 Deskstar that was slightly easier to find. Never saw it on NewEgg, but Best Buy (of all places) carried it in store for a while.
Personally, I believe that when they saw Seagate not shipping ANY 4TB internals that they pulled the Deskstar 7k4000s and figured that anyone that NEEDED a 4TB internal FF would pay through the nose for the Ultrastars. From what I remember about the availability, the DS 7K4000s shipped (Retail pack I believe) for about 3 months and then dried up.
Newegg is out of stock because the only internal 4TB drive that wasn't the Ultrastar was the 5K4000 (and it is eol). 5TB and larger drives haven't even been announced let alone shipped and with things the way they are I don't see any reason they will trot them out any time soon.
Looks that way, though some US retailers have some stock (retail packaging is all I've seen) at around $300 or so.
There's all these tech sites saying that 5TB drives were supposed to be out last year.
Was it the floods that set everything back?
eol?Newegg is out of stock because the only internal 4TB drive that wasn't the Ultrastar was the 5K4000 (and it is eol). 5TB and larger drives haven't even been announced let alone shipped and with things the way they are I don't see any reason they will trot them out any time soon.
eol?
5TB is probably possible. It's just a question of whether it's profitable. Seagate has 1GB platters and WD got them from Hitachi. 5 platter drives have been made plenty of times in the past. A lot of the first 1TB drives had 5 platters, and they weren't the first and probably weren't the last either. I have to figure cramming 5 platters into a 3.5" drive makes things a wee bit tight and runs up costs, so it seems quite likely that while they might be able to make one they might not be able to sell enough of them to make it profitable.
why is it eol already? what's replacing it?End Of Life - No longer in production.. Some stock is still out there in the tertiary market but primary and secondary distribution is out of stock.
why is it eol already? what's replacing it?
But yeah, I think honestly there are some reliability issues to be worked out with the current 3/4TB drives before they try to make another jump in capacity.
I don't personally expect there to be any 5TB 5 platter drives. I believe that if the drive companies see the market for it, more 4TB drives will be trotted out. TDK has already announced working HAMR heads and platters and I would expect the next jump to be 3 Platter 6TB drives by 4Q 2013/1Q 2014. I would expect them still to be available in very small quantities initially, as they will want to offer 1 and 2 platter (2TB, 3TB and 4TB) drives first before 3 and 4 platter drives.
I also expect HAMR to be a big hit in enterprise 10k and 15k 2.5" drives, allowing reliable densities of up to 3TB in a 2.5" FF.
Just hold out for 5TB SSDs to come out. They have 1TB on 2.5" size already. 10TB is around the corner. If you can fit 7-8 1TB drives physically inside of a 3.5" drive, then you can imagine how easily they could release an 8TB right now if they wanted. Won't be long before we start seeing them.
The price for that would be redic though.
Well, they control the price. It is just a matter of smaller less known companies coming out with much cheaper drives at non inflated prices. Unlike normal hard drives, SSDs can be made by many more companies. I am hoping some generics can push down prices of brand names.
And there's no escaping the limits of physics which are quickly being approached by NAND manufacturers.
You're beating a dead horse. There's nothing the Hard rabble loves more than refuting the realities of nand flash scaling. They fantasize of 10TB $100 ssd's in five years and they aren't about to let inconsequential things like physics and economics get in the way.![]()