The best and worst hard drives you can buy

SeaGate Hard Drive

Backblaze, an online backup provider, has published its Hard Drive Stats for 2016 report. The report details the reliability of different hard drive brands and models.

The company bases its statistics on the drives it uses to store customer data for its online backup business.

“At the end of 2016, we had 73,653 spinning hard drives. Of that number, there were 1,553 boot drives and 72,100 data drives,” said Backblaze.

Backblaze calculated the annualised drive failure rate for each drive model. This is based on data from 1 January 2016 through December 2016.

“Failure rate, in the context we use it, is more accurately described as the Annualised Failure Rate. It is computed based on Drive Days and Drive Failures, not on the Drive Count,” said Backblaze.

Hard Drive Failure Rates

The tables below show the hard drive failure stats for 2016.

HGST (formerly Hitachi Global Storage Technologies) had the lowest failure rate, followed by Toshiba, Seagate, and WDC (Western Digital).

Hard Drive Failure Rates by Drive Size
Drive Size Drive Count Drive Days Drive Failures Failure Rate
3TB 6,605 2,416,353 93 1.40%
4TB 54,189 18,504,977 1,042 2.06%
5TB 45 16,425 1 2.22%
6TB 2,335 850,992 41 1.76%
8TB 8,765 1,093,435 48 1.60%
Totals 71,939 22,882,182 1,225 1.95%
Hard Drive Failure Rates by Manufacturer
Manufacturer Drive Count Drive Days Drive Failures Failure Rate
HGST 24,545 8,028,068 132 0.60%
Toshiba 237 86,308 3 1.27%
Seagate 45,531 14,194,485 1,029 2.65%
WDC 1,626 573,321 61 3.88%
Totals 71,939 22,882,182 1,225 1.95%

This article first appeared on MyBroadband and is republished with permission.

Now read: How much you should pay for a hard drive in South Africa

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The best and worst hard drives you can buy

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