Scott Marlowe wrote:
Time to do the ESD shuffle I think.
Nah, I keep the crazy drive around as an interesting test case. Fun to see what happens when I connect to a RAID card; very informative about how thorough the card's investigation of the drive is.
Our 15k5 seagates have been great, with 2 failures in 32 drives in 1.5 years of very heavy use. All our seagate SATAs, whether 500G or 2TB have been the problem children. I've pretty much given up on Seagate SATA drives. The new seagates we got are the consumer 7200.11 drives, but at least they have the latest firmware and all.
Well, what I was pointing out was that all the 15K drives used to come out of this plant in Singapore, which is also where their good consumer drives used to come from too during the 2003-2007ish period where all their products were excellent. Then they moved the consumer production to this new location in Thailand, and all of the drives from there have been total junk. And as of August they closed the original plant, which had still been making the enterprise drives, altogether. So now you can expect the 15K drives to come from the same known source of garbage drives as everything else they've made recently, rather than the old, reliable plant.
I recall the Singapore plant sucked for a while when it got started in the mid 90's too, so maybe this Thailand one will eventually get their issues sorted out. It seems like you can't just move a hard drive plant somewhere and have the new one work without a couple of years of practice first, I keep seeing this pattern repeat.
-- Greg Smith 2ndQuadrant US Baltimore, MD PostgreSQL Training, Services and Support greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx www.2ndQuadrant.us -- Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-performance