Backblaze HDD Stats for Q2 2022 Published

Aug 3, 2022 at 03:37am EDT
Backblaze HDD Stats for Q2 2022 Published 1

We recently reported HDD life expectancies that were analyzed by the company Backblaze. The HDDs were studied over close to ten years, with capacities ranging between 4GB to 14GB and higher. Now, the company released an analysis of hard drive stats for the second quarter of this year to find out the failure rate of the HDDs that the company uses. Major drive companies, such as Seagate, HGST (now under the Western Digital brand after acquisition), and Toshiba. The company also states that it will focus on SDDs later this year.

Backblaze reveals HDD statistics for the second quarter of 2022

As of the end of the second quarter of this year, Backblaze was observing 219,444 HDDs and SSDs in the company's data centers throughout the world. The analysis, 4,020 are used as boot drives, splitting between 2,558 SSDs and 1,462 HDDs. In their latest report, Backblaze focuses on the data drives under management — 215,424 to be exact — and reviews the quarterly and lifetime failure rates.

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The first part of their analysis reviews the lifetime failure rates of HDDs. Backblaze removed 413 HDDs from the observation. The exclusion is because those drives were utilized for testing or were in drive models that did not maintain up to 60 drives. The hard drives will be split into twenty-seven HDD models, with a total of 215,011 HDDs analyzed for the report.

Source: Backblaze

Some observations that Backblaze notes in their study is that the "lifetime annualized failure rate for all the drives listed above is 1.39%. That is the same as last quarter and down from 1.45% one year ago (6/30/2021)." They found that the annualized failure rate noted that three specific drives had the highest failure rate among the twenty-seven tested.

The three stand out from the remainder of the drives analyzed because the sample sizes were limited compared to others. The rates meant that the low and high confidence interval values were extensive and that the three drives were less reliable for the analysis.

In the below chart, Backblaze has removed HDDs with what they consider "wide confidence intervals" and has only listed drives that were readily accessible to all customers.

Source: Backblaze

The following table lists the full results of the analysis, along with notable points.

Source: Backblaze

You can see more detailed descriptions in their report here.

About the author: Jason R. Wilson is a member of the Hardware news team at Wccftech. Equipped with a background in graphic design and writing, Jason works daily to improve his craft and continues to create new and innovative ideas every day.

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