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posted by martyb on Sunday February 21 2021, @08:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the It's-MAMR-time! dept.

Toshiba Unveils World's First FC-MAMR HDD: 18 TB, Helium Filled

Toshiba this week announced the industry's first hard drive featuring flux-control microwave-assisted magnetic recording (FC-MAMR) technology. The new MG09-series HDDs are designed primarily for nearline and enterprise applications, they offer an 18 TB capacity along with an ultra-low idle power consumption.

The Toshiba MG09-series 3.5-inch 18 TB HDD are based on the company's 3rd generation nine-platter helium sealed platform that features 18 heads with a microwave-emitting component which changes magnetic coercivity of the platters before writing data. The HD disks are made by Showa Denko K.K. (SDK), a long-time partner of Toshiba. Each aluminum platter is about 0.635 mm thick, it features an areal density of around 1.5 Tb/inch2 and can store up to 2 TB of data. The MG09 family also includes a 16 TB model which presumably features a lower number of platters (based on the same performance rating).

Previously: Toshiba Will Adopt Western Digital's Microwave-Assisted Magnetic Recording Approach for Hard Drives
Toshiba Roadmap Includes Both MAMR and HAMR Hard Drives, as Well as TDMR and Shingles
Western Digital Releases New 18TB, 20TB EAMR Drives


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 22 2021, @04:56AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 22 2021, @04:56AM (#1115887)

    That info is a little out of date. The usable area is a bit over 87%, thanks to things like ZBR and the encoding is more efficient than 8b/10b. And there are more reserve sectors in HDDs than you realize. They need them during production, testing, and low-level formatting to correct for manufacturing errors that will inevitably slip in without having to bin.