Comparing 15k SAS and SSD
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@obsolesce Nice to confirm what most of us have been saying already.
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@travisdh1 said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce Nice to confirm what most of us have been saying already.
Yeah its nice to see the numbers.
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@obsolesce said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@travisdh1 said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce Nice to confirm what most of us have been saying already.
Yeah its nice to see the numbers.
There is also the reliability rate to consider. SSD drives have 3 to 4 times lower annualized failure rate.
And you're more likely to use more 15K drives and do RAID 10 instead of RAID 1 with SSD.Regarding SAS/SATA SSD they will all disappear soon. NVME drives in the U.2 format have superior performance and a small price premium per GB compared to the same drive in SATA.
As far as I'm concerned SATA/SAS SSD should be bought for legacy use only.
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@pete-s said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@travisdh1 said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce Nice to confirm what most of us have been saying already.
Yeah its nice to see the numbers.
There is also the reliability rate to consider. SSD drives have 3 to 4 times lower annualized failure rate.
And you're more likely to use more 15K drives and do RAID 10 instead of RAID 1 with SSD.Regarding SAS/SATA SSD they will all disappear soon. NVME drives in the U.2 format have superior performance and a small price premium per GB compared to the same drive in SATA.
As far as I'm concerned SATA/SAS SSD should be bought for legacy use only.
That is totally not useful as the server manufacturers are not manufacturing servers to use those generally. Once that changes then I would recommend switching to those.
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@jaredbusch said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@pete-s said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@travisdh1 said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce Nice to confirm what most of us have been saying already.
Yeah its nice to see the numbers.
There is also the reliability rate to consider. SSD drives have 3 to 4 times lower annualized failure rate.
And you're more likely to use more 15K drives and do RAID 10 instead of RAID 1 with SSD.Regarding SAS/SATA SSD they will all disappear soon. NVME drives in the U.2 format have superior performance and a small price premium per GB compared to the same drive in SATA.
As far as I'm concerned SATA/SAS SSD should be bought for legacy use only.
That is totally not useful as the server manufacturers are not manufacturing servers to use those generally. Once that changes then I would recommend switching to those.
That might have been true in the past. But just looking at Dell Poweredge servers with one or two sockets, the following support hot-swap NVME drives : R6415, R7415, C4140, R440, R740xd, R640, R7425.
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Good eye Pete. I would consider moving to NVME at some point! It's going to be a game changer.
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@pete-s said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@jaredbusch said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@pete-s said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@travisdh1 said in Comparing 15k SAS and SSD:
@obsolesce Nice to confirm what most of us have been saying already.
Yeah its nice to see the numbers.
There is also the reliability rate to consider. SSD drives have 3 to 4 times lower annualized failure rate.
And you're more likely to use more 15K drives and do RAID 10 instead of RAID 1 with SSD.Regarding SAS/SATA SSD they will all disappear soon. NVME drives in the U.2 format have superior performance and a small price premium per GB compared to the same drive in SATA.
As far as I'm concerned SATA/SAS SSD should be bought for legacy use only.
That is totally not useful as the server manufacturers are not manufacturing servers to use those generally. Once that changes then I would recommend switching to those.
That might have been true in the past. But just looking at Dell Poweredge servers with one or two sockets, the following support hot-swap NVME drives : R6415, R7415, C4140, R440, R740xd, R640, R7425.
Yes, it is becoming standard, but it is not ubiquitous yet.