Quote from: not_anton on April 20, 2020, 09:10:54I don't think a drive as small as 2TB even needs SMR, perhaps 2.5" >4TB and certainly >8TB 3.5" is where you need to be careful. Whatever your issue is it's not SMR.
Bought a 2TB Toshiba laptop drive because I needed more space in an old laptop. Did not have a word about SMR in its description.
Windows 10 installation took 6 hours and failed to boot... A waste of money!
Quote from: Craig Ward on April 20, 2020, 03:06:47Oh, I see, but at least when I do my own testing I always write >100GB to be able to observe any cache behavior.
@S.Yu - That's part of the problem.
We're not focusing as heavily on Toshiba because they're just using SMR in some value products without labelling them as such.
However, Seagate has started using SMR in several Barracuda models that previously used faster conventional recording methods - such as 2 TB, 4 TB, and 8 TB drives with the regular STXXXXDM00X model numbers e.g. ST2000DM008.
Similarly, Western Digital has been selling WD Red 2 TB, 4 TB, and 6 TB drives using SMR with model numbers ending in 'FAX' vs the older 'FRX' models. The Red drives were all listed as designed to work together in a NAS, but these new drives have been causing rebuild issues when being added to existing setups.
So in the case of Seagate and Western Digital, unless people are very careful at comparing model numbers, they would assume that the Barracuda or the Red they were about to buy in 2020 was the same as the review they had just seen from 2018/2019 about the same capacity Barracuda or Red.
Further to this, because of the use of a cache platter, benchmarks that only write a few dozen GB of data or less (e.g. CrystalDiskMark) would show the same full write performance as the older drives. You would need to write a larger amount of data than the cache to see the difference in speed. This probably wouldn't matter for the majority of users out there, but in the case of the NAS drives, it can impact heavily on performance for activities that involve large amounts of data (e.g. adding a blank drive to a pool, creating a full backup from another device, or moving large folders/projects onto the NAS).