Miscellaneous Aspects and Concluding Remarks

The BarraCuda Pro 14TB drive helps Seagate retain their pole position in terms of offering the highest capacity drives for desktops and home consumers. Over the last three years, they have consistently been able to raise the bar, starting from 10TB, on to 12TB, and now, 14TB. Like the 12TB version from last year, the 14TB version also features eight PMR platters in a helium-filled sealed enclosure. The key to the increase in areal density lies in two-dimensional magnetic recording (TDMR). Prior to offering some concluding remarks, a brief look at TDMR could help some readers in appreciating Seagate's technological advancements that have resulted in the BarraCuda Pro 14TB drive.

Two-Dimensional Magnetic Recording

Hard drives store data in platters with a magnetic medium. A platter has magnetic grains spread all over, and each bit is stored in a magnetic region with hundreds of magnetic grains. The 'heads' travel over the platters to write data by magnetizing certain regions, or, read the data from the region. Due to the circular nature of the platters that are mounted on a spindle, these magnetic regions are arranged in circular tracks. One of the key components of the areal density (i.e, number of bits that can be stored in a given platter area) is the 'tracks per inch' metric. Making the tracks narrow helps drive the areal density up. However, making them too narrow makes it difficult for the reading head. Since making the heads smaller is physically challenging, narrow tracks end up making the reader see more of the adjacent tracks and driving up the noise factor.


TDMR Operation (Source: The Magnetic Hard Disk Drive - Today's Technical Status and Future, Dr. Edward Grochowski and Dr. Peter Goglia, SNIA Data Storage Conference, 2016)

The TDMR solution puts two (or more) readers on the same track or partially on adjacent tracks. This provides a better idea of the interference effects and can help in cancelling out the noise. The first generation of TDMR only implements two heads partially on adjacent tracks to be able to read out the data in the narrow tracks with better confidence. It is envisaged that advancements in TDMR will eventually result in 3 or even more readers and the number of grains needed per user bit will also go down. In theory, TDMR can also be used to improve read throughput, but, the first generation implementations do not seem to be taking advantage of that possibility (at least in the consumer-focused drives such as the BarraCuda Pro 14TB we looked at today).

Final Words

Desktop hard drives are typically not rated for 24x7 operation, but, the BarraCuda Pro series bucks that trend. In addition to a 300TB/yr workload rating, Seagate also provides a 5-year warranty and, with product registration, 2 years of data recovery services. The lower load/unload cycles rating (300K, compared to the 600K in the IronWolf Pro NAS drives) and MTBF (1M hours, compared to 1.2M for the Pro NAS drive) are slightly disappointing aspects, but, they are made up for by the warranty and DRS.

In the desktop gaming market, per-game storage requirements are running into 100s of GBs, and SSDs continue to remain above $0.20/GB. Under these circumstances, high-capacity hard drives are continuing to remain relevant. In our evaluation, the BarraCuda Pro 14TB managed to perform quite well for largely sequential workloads (typical of bulk storage requirements in gaming workloads). Consumers dealing with content creation can also use the BarraCuda Pro as part of a direct-attached storage system. For single-user scenarios, a DAS inherently makes more sense than a NAS. It allows use of enclosures sporting interfaces with higher speeds. The BarraCuda Pro 14TB drive shows great performance in such devices.

Similar to the 10TB and 12TB versions that we had evaluated in the last couple of years, the 14TB version leaves very little to complain about. The launch price of $580 is $50 more than the 12TB version's MSRP when it was introduced last year. That said, in terms of launch MSRPs, the cost per GB metric is still in the 14TB's favor (4.14c/GB vs. 4.42c/GB). However, the 12TB version's current street price is just $440 (3.67c/GB). All said, it must be noted that the BarraCuda Pro 14TB is a pure capacity play. It doesn't deliver any marked performance improvements over either the 10TB or the 12TB versions released in the previous years. However, it does enable users to have more local / direct-attached storage per 3.5" drive bay than ever before at consumer price points.

Performance - Direct Attached Storage Mode
Comments Locked

65 Comments

View All Comments

  • Ratman6161 - Monday, September 10, 2018 - link

    Personally, I would not be using these in a RAID array. I would be using a RAID array of smaller disks that added up to a real world capacity similar to the single drive. With a RAID 5, you could tolerate a single drive failing without data loss.
  • Byte - Monday, September 10, 2018 - link

    Since it is a Seagate, that's a lot of data to lose.
  • lorribot - Monday, September 10, 2018 - link

    Most Enterprise storage vendors reommend RAID 6 for SATA drives due to their poor fault detecting abilities.
    What this can mean is when you have a disk in a RAID 5 fail and be replaced, during the 7 days it takes to rebuild your raid the extra load will either break another disk or you will suddenly find you have a undetected dead spot on a drive and your RAID will collapse. Still at least with the Disk recovery service you can get back your data, no wait you raided it so no chance.
    Buy one disk and copy/backup to the cloud, no wait only have 0.5Mb/s up link on my fibre internet.......
  • Diji1 - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link

    >In the desktop gaming market, per-game storage requirements are running into 100s of GBs, and SSDs continue to remain above $0.20/GB. Under these circumstances, high-capacity hard drives are continuing to remain relevant.

    I couldn't go back to hard drive storage for gaming.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link

    I'd hate to do so too, but not everyone can afford 1 or 2TB SSDs; and smaller sizes don't play nice with >100GB game installs. The flip side is that the semi-common gaming laptop spec of a 256/512GB SSD and 1TB HDD really needs an upgrade to the HDD too. That in turn needs the HDD makers to put out a 2TB 7200 RPM drive at something less than enterprise prices, and figure out how to cram 3TB into the 2.5" form factor in the reasonably near future.
  • Ratman6161 - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link

    Your wish has been granted. See:

    https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B01M0AADIX/ref=twister...
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link

    It's not just that at 15mm they don't fit in laptops, those are 5400rpm drives not 7200. Spinning rust is bad enough under any circumstances, 5400 RPM is unacceptably worse for anything where IO performance matters at all.
  • GTVic - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link

    14TB, Otherwise known as 12.7TB...
  • cjl - Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - link

    14TB. Tera = 10^12, and this drive has 14*10^12 bytes.
  • mapesdhs - Wednesday, September 12, 2018 - link

    Yeah, that made me laugh when looking at the benchmark app info in the screenshots. :D

    Guess I'm old school, brought up with 2^n, but it is funny that the capacities are now so high, the real TB capacity (stuff this decimal nonsense) is more than an entire TB less than it first appears.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now