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SSDs at 30TB and More

Now with much higher capacities than HDDs

The last market for HDDs will be high-capacity nearline drives.

2.5-inch units are almost dead under the pressure of SSDs. There were not any new ones revealed since 2018 and all the manufacturers have stopped to invest in this technology, for laptop computers as well as in enterprise 10,000 and 15.000rpm drives. But laptop drives can be used for cheap backup, an application needing small performances.

SSDs are superior to HDDs for speed (access time and transfer rate), energy consumption, reliability and weight, and the differentiation in price is decreasing. For 1TB for example, it costs a little more, but consumers now prefer to pay the difference (around $10 to $20) to get all the benefits of flash drives.

Prices of SSDs are decreasing faster, thanks to the addition of more layers on NAND chips, now up to 128, and this figure will probably increases in the future. Gartner expects enterprise SSD prices to decline 10% to 15% between the 3Q20 and 4Q20 and continue to decrease through 1H21 with flash chip prices down by 23.7% in 2021 compared to 2020.

HDDs have only 2 possibilities to get higher capacities: 

  • increasing areal densities on the magnetic media: but even with HAMR or MAMR , already adopted, it is not a big jump, and we are reaching ultimate limits.
  • adding more disks into the same 3.5-inch form factor: today it’s 18TB using on configuration with 9x2TB platters and the arrival of 10-disk 20-heads HDD is probable to reach 20TB in 4Q20, affirms WD and next December for Seagate, once more a limit then extremely difficult to increase in this volume.  

Anyway, SSDs are now largely beating HDDs also in capacity. As these later culminate at 18TB, the first ones are reaching 30TB and more.

We have counted 15 of them. See below.

SSDs revealed at 30TB and more

Year Company Model Form factor From (GB) To (GB) Max. transfer rate MB/s (read) Max transfer rate MB/s (write) Interface Comments
2020 Nimbus Data Exadrive DC 3.5 50,000 100,000 500 460 6Gb SAS, 6Gb SATA eMLC
2019 NGD Systems Newport U.2, M.2 16,000 64,000     PCIe Gen 3×4, NVMe 1.3  
2020 Nimbus Data ExaDrive NL 3.5 16,000 64,000     SAS, SATA QLC
2017 Seagate       64,000 13,000   NVMe Demo at FMS2017, never offered
2016 Seagate 60TB SAS SSD 3.5   60,000     SAS Micron 3D NAND
2014 SMART Modular Osmium Drive 3.5 25,000 50,000 472 325 6Gb SAS MLC
2018 Viking Technology UHC-Silo SSD 3.5 25,000 50,000 500 350 6Gb SAS MLC
2019 Intel Optane DC persistent memory     36,000       With DRAM
2018 Intel DC P4500 12-inch ruler   32,000       3D NAND
2016 Samsung 32TB SAS SSD 2.5   32,000 2,100 1,700 12Gb SAS 64-layer V-NAND
2018 Shannon G5i AIC HH-HL, HL-FH PCIe 3,200 32,000 500 5,000 PCIe 30×8 3D TLC
2020 Kioxia CM6 2.5 800 30,720 6,900 6,900 PCIe Gen 4, NVMe 1.4 96-layer BiCS Flash 3D TLC
2020 Kioxia PM6 2.5 400 30,720 4,300   24Gb SAS 96-layer BiCS Flash 3D TLC
2019 Samsung PM1733 2.5 U.2 960 30,720 3,800 8,000 MVMe  

Their prices are generally not revealed by manufacturers because as are very expansive. Several of them are packed in 3.5-inch form factor – similar for nearline HDDs – with an incredible record of 100TB for Nimbus Exadrive DC, and 64TB QLC-based Exadrive NL at $10,900 or $0.17/GB. In 2.5-inch volume, Samsung reached 32TB for its 12Gb SAS unit.

Per comparison, the Seagate Exos X18 18TB 3.5-inch hard drive is now available for an MSRP of $561.75 or $0.03/GB. It’s $592.99 for WD 18TB Gold Enterprise Class SATA.

From 2018 to 2024, Trendfocus recently previewed for SSDs a CAGR of 11.6% for units, 25.6% in exabytes shipped and 7.8% in revenue, for HDDs -6.1%, 23.3% and 5.8%, respectively.

 

 

 

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