3.5Gb ST43400N

2007-12-25 8:29:00

I recently asked for info about the Seagate ST43400N disk drive.

here are the answers to my 3 questions:

> 1) Anybody ever had any problems with this drive, or is it a "good bet"?

Nobody had a bad word to say, many people liked the drive, and considered

it to be reliable and to have good performance. Its "other" name

is an Elite-3.

> 2) As long as I keep individual partitions below 2Gb in size, should

> I be okay under 4.1.3?

Yes was the common concencious [I wish OW had an integrated spell-checker!]

Some people recommended Sun's On-Line Disk Suite if I wanted to exceed that.

> 3) Does anyone know the actual size of this drive, eg how many blocks?

> (When suppliers quote sizes, they're sometimes a bit "economical

> with the truth" )

Turns out my supplier was being _very_ economical indeed. Unformatted, the

drive is 3.4Gb (hence the 34 in ST43400N), which "sort of" rounds

to 3.5Gb. Since using an unformatted drive is a clever trick indeed,

fortatted capacity is nearer 2.9Gb

here are the various block sizes I was quoted. These will of course vary

depending on whether they included alt cyls or not, but they give a good

idea.

5,696,655

5,688,447

5,683,986

5,683,356

5,630,688

If I define 1Gb as 1,000,000 x 1024 bytes (so that output from df

is easy to convert), then these block sizes correspond to 2.81Gb - 2.85Gb

Depending on how generous I am with inodes and minfree, this could

drop by a further 15%, to approx 2.4Gb usable space.

And here's a couple of format.dat entries for good measure.

disk_type = "Seagate ST43400N Elite 3" \

        : ctlr = SCSI : fmt_time = 4 : trks_zone = 21 : asect = 6 \

        : atrks = 21 : ncyl = 2736 : acyl = 2 : pcyl = 2738 \

        : nhead = 21 : nsect = 99 : rpm = 5400 : bpt = 49000

disk_type = "Elite III" \

        : ctlr = SCSI : fmt_time = 4 \

        : ncyl = 2738 : acyl = 2 : pcyl = 2740 : nhead = 21 : nsect = 99 \

        : rpm = 5400 : bpt = 55468

Other handy hints:

dannyd@mel4360.miden.com.au (Zdenek Dospisil \(AARM1A\)):

> These drives are ELITE not Wren drives , is not big deal , but be

> aware

> of different position of connectors. The SCSI and Power connectors are

> on the top of back of driver ( not on the bottom as SEAGATE). Check

> your box for this as well length of SCSI cable - they can't be mounted

> upside down . The size of disk is ~2.7GB formatted.~

rabbit@pacesetter.com:

> Note: the ST43400ND has differential SCSI, whereas

> the ST43400N is the fast SCSI-2; most of the ones we have are ND.

> The only difference is you need a differential controller for the ND

> drives (like Sun's X1052A - SBUS Fast Differential SCSI buffered

> Ethernet controller)

Fanx 2:

jaa101@deakin.anu.edu.au (James Ashton)

David Warren <warren@atmos.washington.edu>

dannyd@mel4360.miden.com.au (Zdenek Dospisil \(AARM1A\))

szh@zcon.com (Syed Zaeem Hosain)

James Pearson <jcpearso@ps.ucl.ac.uk>

epolgar@icon.hu (Endre Polgar)

shandelm@jpmorgan.com (Joel Shandelman FIMS Information Systems - 212-648-4480)

bobr@houston.wireline.SLB.COM ( Bob Reardon )

nrd@lenti.med.umn.edu

johnb@blas.cis.mcmaster.ca (John Benjamins)

patp@juliet.ll.mit.edu ( Patrick Pawlak )

Con Nakos <cbn@mrd.dsto.gov.au>

jgarb@erim.org (Joe Garbarino)

sozoa@atmel.com (Steve Ozoa)

tlk@micom.com (Todd L. Kindig)

susan%apunix@UCSD.EDU (Susan Fenley)

Doug Neuhauser <doug@perry.berkeley.edu>

vasey@issi.com

ept@ornl.gov ( E P Tinnel)

Mark.Davis@Eng.Sun.COM (Mark Davis)

glenn@uniq.com.au (Glenn Satchell - Uniq Professional Services)

Phill St-Louis <phill2@hivnet.ubc.ca>

Joseph Kwan <rabbit@pacesetter.com>

Dave.

* David Mitchell, Systems Administrator, email: D.Mitchell@dcs.shef.ac.uk

* Dept. Computer Science, Sheffield Uni. phone: +44 742-825573

* 211 Portobello St, Sheffield S1 4DP, UK. fax: +44 742-780972

*

* Standards (n). Battle insignia or tribal totems

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