- Western Digital says hard drive acceleration no longer hurts application performance
- WD solution delivers lower storage power consumption without sacrificing consistent response times
- The unit’s reduced power usage allows for greater storage capacity within the confines of the existing rack.
Western Digital (WD) has developed a new power-optimized drive technology that allows hard drives to stop spinning without causing significant performance penalties.
The company’s chief product officer, Ahmed Shihab, said the technique reduces power consumption enough to make it important to customers while preserving the performance they expect.
Traditional hard drives consume a significant amount of power even when users or applications do not actively access them, and this is not sustainable in the long term.
Rotating units saves energy
The technique allows drives to enter a low-power state without the long startup delays that have made these approaches impractical in the past.
When a drive stops spinning, it consumes much less electricity, which directly reduces the operating costs of large storage arrays.
The capacity benefit comes from a side effect: lower power consumption per unit means data center operators can pack more units into the same power and cooling environment.
Western Digital claims that the performance hit from spinning drives up and down is small enough that most applications won’t notice the difference.
The company has designed the technology to adapt to the software stack running on top of it, without requiring major changes from customers.
Previous attempts to slow down hard drives to save power failed because the performance hit was simply too severe for production environments.
Applications expecting sub-millisecond access times would hang while waiting for the disks to spin back up to their maximum operating speed.
Western Digital’s new formula balances power savings with accessibility, keeping delay short enough to stay within typical application wait times.
The company says this is the first time it has seen genuine interest and positive customer feedback in lower-power technology.
Hyperscale operators have been asking for storage solutions that don’t force them to choose between energy efficiency and reliable performance.
A new level of storage between fast and slow drives
The technology effectively creates a new level of storage that ranks among high-performance SSDs. and traditional archival hard drives.
Frequently accessed data remains on fully powered drives, while less critical data can be stored on drives that stop spinning when idle.
The operating system and storage software determine what data belongs at each level, not the drive itself.
Western Digital’s innovation is purely on the hardware side, making deactivation convenient without waiting for the software to catch up.
The capacity gains come from density, not from larger platters or new recording techniques.
More drives with the same power budget means more total terabytes per rack, and that’s a math problem every data center operator understands.
The smart part is making the reduction cycle fast enough that no one notices, and that’s where Western Digital claims to have finally solved what has been an industry-wide headache.
That said, hyperscalers will test this solution aggressively and their verdict will decide whether the rest of the industry follows suit.
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