Backblaze’s HDD Reliability Report Questions Enterprise Drive Premium


Cloud backup service provider Backblaze recently published its hard drive reliability statistics for Q3 2017. The company’s analysis of its own data highlights something interesting, which is that the difference in observed reliability between its Seagate 8TB consumer and enterprise drives is only 0.1%. This led the company to pose the question of whether enterprise hard drives are worth the cost premium.

Backblaze’s data set currently consists of over 86,000 hard drives ranging from 3TB to 12TB and from manufacturers WDC, HGST, Seagate, and Toshiba. We’ve commented on Backblaze’s misuse of its hard drives before, but we understand that it’s altered its setup since then to address some of those issues. In any case, its data can still be a somewhat valuable additional point of comparison for making purchasing decisions.

The metrics in Backblaze’s data are straightforward. “Drive Count” is the total number of drives of a model. “Drive Days” is the combined total running time of all the drives that make up “Drive Count.” “Drive Failures” is the total number of drives that make up “Drive Count” that failed. “Annualized Failure Rate” is “Drive Failures” divided by “Drive Days” (converted to years) and it’s Backblaze’s chosen metric for drive reliability.

There are some things to keep in mind when looking at Backblaze’s data, however. First, a drive model’s annualized failure rate is meaningful only if it also has a high drive count and drive days. Otherwise, there probably isn’t enough data on it yet. Second, there is at least one unknown variable: individual drive life. All the drives are of different ages, so the data for a particular model with high drive days could still be composed of older and newer batches of drives. The implications therein depend on point of view; older drives could be closer to end-of-life and are therefore more likely to fail, but they could also be the ones that did not fail at the outset and are therefore more reliable.

Backblaze’s own analysis has an additional and particularly interesting point of note. At the beginning of 2017, the company added two models of 8TB Seagate drives: a consumer drive (ST8000DM002) and an enterprise drive (ST8000NM0055). The cumulative annualized failure rate for the two are 1.1% and 1.2%, respectively. The difference of only 0.1% led Backblaze to question whether the enterprise drive is worth the price difference.

However, this is only a preliminary finding, and it should be taken with a grain of salt. Backblaze does note in its report the difference in the respective warranty periods of these drives. The consumer drive has a one-year warranty, whereas the enterprise drive has a five-year warranty. The 0.1% difference is after only one year (actually, slightly less) of use, which is within the consumer drive’s warranty period. The advantage of the enterprise drive is that it should offer a stronger annualized failure rate over time. Therefore, the consistency between the two drives over the time period Backblaze tested them doesn’t tell us anything about the respective value of the drives when the consumer model extends past its warranty period.

It’ll certainly be interesting to see what happens as Backblaze continues to track these drives through their lifetime.