HGST Launches Ultrastar DC SS530 SSDs: 3D TLC NAND, 15.36 TB, SAS 12 Gbps
by Anton Shilov on August 2, 2018 3:00 PM EST- Posted in
- SSDs
- Intel
- Western Digital
- HGST
- Enterprise SSDs
- 3D TLC
Western Digital has quietly added its new HGST Ultrastar DC SS530-series SSDs to its lineup of products. The new drives are aimed at mission-critical storage applications, such as financial transactions, e-commerce, virtualization, database analytics, etc. that use an SAS interface. The new SSDs carry up to 15.36 TB of user-accessible flash onboard and offer three endurance options to address read-intensive, mixed-use, as well as write-intensive workloads.
The Ultrastar DC SS530 is based on the same proprietary controller architecture as the previous-generation Ultrastar SS300 drives (i.e., the controller was presumably co-designed with Intel), but the new one is based exclusively for second-gen 3D TLC NAND, whereas previously the manufacturer used both 3D TLC and 3D MLC memory. Features of the controllers used for the DC SS530 and the SS300 are similar too and include an extended error correction code (ECC with a 1x10^-17 bit error rate) to enable higher performance and data integrity, exclusive-OR (XOR) parity (in case a whole NAND die fails) as well as parity-checked internal data paths. Besides, the new DC SS530 complies with the T10 Data Integrity Field (DIF) standard, which requires all interconnect buses to have parity protection (on the system level), as well as a special power loss data management feature that does not use supercapacitors.
Western Digital’s Ultrastar DC SS530 come in 2.5-inch/15-mm form-factor, feature an SAS 12 Gbps single-port/dual-port interface and are drop-in compatible with existing servers that support 9, 11, and 14 W per drive power options. The manufacturer will also offer a variety of the Ultrastar DC SS530 models supporting capabilities like TCG encryption, TCG+FIPS, and instant secure erase to comply with different security requirements.
When it comes to sustained sequential performance, the Ultrastar DC SS530 drives offer up to 2254 MB/s read speeds as well as up to 2223 MB/s write speeds, which is slightly faster when compared to the Ultrastar SS300. Random read performance of all DC SS530 hits 440,000 IOPS, about 10% higher than the predecessor. When it comes to random writes, the SSDs rated for 10 DWPD (drive writes per day) can hit 320,000 IOPS, whereas the high-capacity drives rated for 1 DWPD can hit 100,000 IOPS. Given the fact that the DC SS530 support three power options, end users can choose between higher IOPS performance and lower power consumption (i.e., faster drives consume more energy).
It is noteworthy that within its new Ultrastar DC SS530 family of SSDs Western Digital no longer offers drives rated for less than 1 DWPD, thus addressing only ‘classic’ enterprise applications with various workloads rather than solutions that are extremely read intensive. As for warranty and MTBF, the new SSDs are rated for 2.5 million hours MTBF and are covered with a five-year limited warranty (or the max PB written, whichever occurs first).
Western Digital’s Ultrastar DC SS530 are listed on the company’s website, so chances are that the SSDs are already available to at least some of its customers.
HGST Ultrastar DC HC530 Series Specifications | ||||
10 DWPD | 3 DWPD | 1 DWPD | ||
Capacities | 400 GB 800 GB 1,600 GB 3,200 GB |
400 GB 800 GB 1,600 GB 3,200 GB 6,400 GB |
480 GB 960 GB 1,920 GB 3,840 GB 7,680 GB 15,360 TB |
|
Form Factor | 2.5"/15mm | |||
Interface | SAS 6/12 Gb/s, dual port for 12 Gb/s | |||
Controller | Proprietary | |||
NAND | 3D TLC NAND | |||
Sequential Read | 2254 MB/s | |||
Sequential Write | 2223 MB/s | |||
Random Read (4 KB) IOPS | 440,000 | |||
Random Write (4 KB) IOPS | 320,000 | 240,000 | 100,000 | |
Mixed Random R/W (70:30 R:W, 4KB) Max IOPS |
430,000 | 330,000 | 190,000 | |
Read/Write Latency | 92/26 | 92/27 | 92/36 | |
Power | Idle | 3.2 W (average) | ||
Operating | 9 W, 11 W, 14 W (configurable) | |||
Endurance | DWPD | 10 | 3 | 1 |
Max. PB | 400 GB: 7.3 PB 800 GB: 14.6 PB 1.6 TB: 29.2 PB 3.2 TB: 58.4 PB |
400 GB: 2.19 PB 800 GB: 4.38 PB 1.6 TB: 8.76 PB 3.2 TB: 17.52 PB |
480 GB: 0.87 PB 960 GB: 1.75 PB 1.92 TB: 3.5 PB 3.84 TB: 7 PB 7.68 TB: 14 PB |
|
Encryption | AES-256 (?) | |||
Power Loss Protection | Yes | |||
MTBF | 2.5 million hours | |||
Warranty | Five years or max PB written (whichever occurs first) | |||
Models | WUSTM3232ASS20x WUSTM3216ASS20x WUSTM3280ASS20x WUSTM3240ASS20x | WUSTR6464ASS20x WUSTR6432ASS20x WUSTR6416ASS20x WUSTR6480ASS20x WUSTR6440ASS20x | WUSTR1515ASS20x WUSTR1576ASS20x WUSTR1538ASS20x WUSTR1519ASS20x WUSTR1596ASS20x WUSTR1548ASS20x | |
Legend for Model Numbers | W = Western Digital U = Ultrastar S = Standard TM=TLC/mainstream endurance TR= TLC/read-intensive 32 = Full capacity (3.2TB) 32 = Capacity of this model (15=15.2 TB, 76=7.6TB, 38=3.84TB 32=3.2TB, 19=1.92TB, 16=1.2TB, 96=960GB, 80=800GB, 48=480GB, 40=400GB) A = Generation code S = Small form factor (2.5" SFF) S2 = Interface, SAS 12Gb/s x in Model Number denotes Encryption level: 0 = Instant Secure Erase 1 = TCG Encryption 4 = No Encryption, Secure Erase 5 = TCG + FIPS |
Related Reading:
Source: HGST
9 Comments
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itnAAnti - Thursday, August 2, 2018 - link
Minor typo in the acronym: “...Western Digital no longer offers drives rated for less than 1 DPWD...”Anton Shilov - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link
Thank you, fixed.nimi - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link
You have a typo in the spec matrix, surely it's 15,360 GB not TBerple2 - Sunday, August 12, 2018 - link
I was about to jump on this for "US vs. Rest of the World" for how it uses . and , WRT numbers, but it's not consistent with what's printed one line above. Looks like a Typo to me, too!cygnus1 - Friday, August 3, 2018 - link
I love that the words price or cost aren't anywhere to be found in the post...pigo - Monday, August 6, 2018 - link
thanks for sharing nice post, keep up the great work continue https://putlockershub.com/erple2 - Sunday, August 12, 2018 - link
Doing the math, I'm not sure how a 12 Gbps interface can read or write out 2200+ MB/s sustained? Or is there some "assumed compression" or is the "dual interface" assumed for the 12Gb interface not a dual 6Gb interface? Or is there something else how this works out in the Enterprise space? I'll admit to not being that well versed in SAS products and how they're marketed vs. what they're actually capable of.mampan - Monday, January 21, 2019 - link
There's no utility for HGST NVMe/SAS SSD such as Intel® Solid State Drive Toolbox or Samsung Magician.It is pathetic that HGST(Western Digital) has no 'HGST Device Mager' but has a user guide for that.
https://documents.westerndigital.com/content/dam/d...
darelsafa - Tuesday, April 13, 2021 - link
thank you!https://aldamam.com/