Serial ATA vs. SCSI - Will it Compete?
fazzumar asks: "I've been checking out serial ATA (SATA) and it seems like it's got a lot of potential. The first generation spec was finalized August 2001 and members of the SATA group anticipate a 12-18 month acceptance period. They've planned for a cut-over phase and adapters that allow connecting SATA devices to ATA adapters and vice versa. The cables alone are a worthwhile advantage (4 pins, up to 1 meter in length), and the 150MB/sec bandwidth is a (minor) improvement over current ATA drives & adapters. Infoworld has a story on SATA that provides a few tidbits of information. What I really want to know is, will manufacturers of the new host adapters be able to integrate many of the advantages that SCSI provides or will the cost of adding these features push the retail cost too high for the anticipated market?" I just picked up a new WD Hard drive just yesterday for the planned MP3 jukebox I hope to be building near the end of the summer. I really wanted to go SCSI, but couldn't. While the poster claims a near ~7x in price difference, I saw about a ~5x difference in my local store. Is SCSI in danger of falling behind IDE drives (especially serial IDE drives) in popularity?
"I love SCSI, and I can bring myself to accept the additional cost of the controller, but with IDE hard drive prices dropping, I frequently wonder if SCSI drive prices are artificially inflated. Just a few years ago, SCSI drives were ~10-20% more than IDE and now they're ~7X more than an IDE drive. (Seagate 10k RPM SCSI - ~18 gig for ~175. Western Digital 7200 RPM IDE - ~120 gig for ~175) If the option comes out to get SCSI performance from an IDE drive I'm going to take it."
I frequently wonder if SCSI drive prices are artificially inflated.
... but generally speaking, they're the same thing. There are certainly not enough differences to justify the price. Is there some magic spell they cast on SCSI drives that quadruples the price? SCSI's "enterprise capabilities" make using SCSI on the desktop really expensive, so they continue to gouge us.
:(
Hell yes - There's no way they aren't. I'm sick of this price barrier myself.
Look at a SCSI drive and an IDE drive. Sure, there are some differences, MTBF, blah blah
What do we get in return, Technology that Should Not Exist(tm) - Things like IDE RAID.
Sucks being a SCSI zealot.
Quote: The ATA drive subsystem has a high-bandwidth I/O bus that minimizes bottlenecks, even when all four drives are engaged at once. That's how Xserve can achieve a theoretical peak performance of up to 266 megabytes per second, compared to a 160MB/s theoretical performance with SCSI Ultra160 disk drives -- at a significantly lower cost, and while generating less heat than SCSI drives.
Is SCSI in danger of falling behind IDE drives (especially serial IDE drives) in popularity?
In other news, Microsoft Windows takes a majority of the desktop operating system market.
If the option comes out to get SCSI performance from an IDE drive I'm going to take it."
Review of the Western Digital 1200JB (The 8MB Cache Special Edition.)
With desktop performance and capacity vastly superior to the competition as well as a surprisingly low operating temperature, the Caviar WD1200JB reaffirms Western Digital's preeminence in the IDE desktop performance segment. In fact, for desktop usage, the JB bests all 10k RPM drives save only Maxtor's Atlas 10k III.
Once again we're obligated to point out an interesting fact. The hardware enthusiast market, comprising a significant portion of StorageReview.com's readership, has always pledged it would respond enthusiastically to the world's first 10,000 RPM drive. These folks want the performance of a 10k RPM SCSI drive without the SCSI premium. The WD1200JB, like the WD1000BB-SE, delivers the desktop performance of a good 10k RPM drive according to tests constructed from real-world, high-level applications. If you want SCSI's performance without its price or capacity limits, the WD1200JB is the drive for you.
Sometimes, you have to love ebay. I still need a few drives, for which the smaller ones go about $1 per gig. 256 drives before I run out of room. The only thing that will hurt me price wise, is a decent rackmount drive case. Software raid, at very nearly the max theoretical throughput.
SCSI was nice, but it is dead. IDE is alive, but it sucks. Fibre channel is seen as an enterprise-only tech, and they no longer have use for the small stuff on their SANs. I'm not so proud that I won't humbly accept their table scraps.
Oh, and before anyone else mentions it... I don't have to use expensive fiber. That's only for ridiculously long cable runs. 20 meters max for stp cat5. More than enough.
I remember being at Adaptec Live SPAM Session at MS Technet a few years back. The Adaptec rep told of his many trips to drive manufacturers, particularly Seagate.
He said that SCSI drives come off the same lines as IDEs, if the batch can handle running at 10000 RPM, they're Cheetahs, if they can do 7200, they're Barracuda SCSI's, if they have a lower MTBF, they're IDE 'cudas.
I never really believed him, since the physical drive cases are different, but his contention was that they were all the same drives, with different electronics slapped on depending on MTBF.
Take it for what you will, BIG Grains of Salt...
I'll...I'll put strychnine in the guacamole.
I like music
Am I bad, you're right on the 127 figure. Not that I'll get close to that either.
The card itself is on the way. Need to get drives yet. I really want a nice looking rackmount box... but I don't even have a rack yet. Would love to be able to get matching 4U ATX and disk enclosure cases. My current home server is a crappy old dual p100 tower, but I'm getting ready to build my rackmount dual athlon server. Heck, I may even build more than one, eventually, cluster the things. The fibre channel raid is primarily going to be used for my soon to be rackmounted DirecTivo's (only have 2 so far, gonna up it to 4 directivos soon).
SSA is still alive and well, although it tends to only get used with IBM systems. The IBM marketing says it will work with other vendors (including Windows), but I haven't seen it used elsewhere.
When the next generation of motherboards comes out with support for 4-8 serial disk ports, as well as the USB, Firewire, LAN, and other ports, then ATA can be left for cdroms and the like.
Is what seperates SCSI from IDE, but it's in the IDE spec, and people are working on it for the 2.5 linux kernel, there have been two recent patches implementing it.
Right now, you can bet that most drive and chipset suport for it is bugy as hell, but if people start to use it, it will improve.
Plato seems wrong to me today