The world’s fastest hard drive is on sale now, nearly matching SATA SSDs like the Samsung 870 QVO – but it ain’t cheap

  • High speed 18TB Seagate Exos 2X18 HDD narrows gap with SATA SSDs
  • Dual actuator Mach.2 technology delivers 554MBps reads at enterprise friendly capacities
  • Drive suits workloads needing fast spinning media rather than pure capacity

The Seagate Exos 2X18 hard drive is available to buy from Insight priced at $659.99 – and while it isn’t exactly the Black Friday bargain of the year, that’s $19 off the usual price of $679.

Aimed at data center and enterprise workloads, this 18TB model stands out for more than just raw capacity – it’s fast.

The Exos 2X18 uses Seagate’s Mach.2 dual actuator design, which splits the drive’s mechanics into two independent actuator assemblies that work in parallel. The result is quoted sequential transfer rates of up to 554MBps for reads and 528MBps for writes, roughly double a typical 7200rpm enterprise HDD.

Near SATA SSD speeds

On paper, that puts this hard drive in the same territory as many SATA SSDs such as the Samsung 870 QVO, at least for large sequential transfers.

A SATA SSD is still far quicker for random access and latency sensitive work, but for streaming data or backup jobs the Exos drive narrows the gap far more than standard spinning disks.

The Exos 2X18 uses a 3.5 inch form factor with a SAS 12Gb/s interface and 256MB cache. Average latency is listed at 4.16ms and spindle speed at 7200rpm, backed by a claimed MTBF of 2500000 hours and a five year limited warranty.

The drive is listed at 304 IOPS for 4KB random reads and 560 IOPS for 4KB random writes. Power draw ranges from 8W at idle to 13.5W during sequential reads.

Helium filled construction, PowerBalance and Power Choice features are all aimed at keeping thermals and energy use predictable in dense racks.

Seagate Secure support can help with hardware based data protection in managed environments, although that will naturally depend on host integration.

This kind of performance comes at a steep price for a single 18TB drive. For buyers that only need capacity, slower nearline disks or high capacity SATA SSDs will work out cheaper per terabyte.

For workloads that are still bound to spinning media but benefit from higher throughput, the Exos 2X18 offers an unusual middle ground between traditional HDDs and entry level SATA SSDs.

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

Wake Up Dead Man digs deep for a darker, more powerful Knives Out

Over two films, Rian Johnson's Knives Out series has offered something largely absent from the modern movie landscape: intricate murder mysteries full of humor...

Google is powering a new US military AI platform

The Department of Defense is announcing its own "bespoke" AI platform, GenAI.mil, and Google Cloud's Gemini will be the first AI tool available on...

Somehow, this AI-generated McDonald’s ad about hating Christmas was a flop

If you're having a stressful holiday season, the answer is McDonald's - at least, that's what a now-removed AI-generated ad suggested, as reported by...

Both sides of the aisle hate the AI moratorium

Hello and welcome to Regulator. If you're a subscriber, you are stalwart and true, and if you're here from the internet, prove your chivalry...

Traeger debuts Woodridge Pro Plus grill with Wi-Fi features and built-in storage cabinet

Traeger debuted its Woodridge line of Wi-Fi-enabled pellet grills back in January. The overall theme across the Woodridge, Woodridge Pro and Woodridge Elite is...

How to watch The Game Awards 2025 on December 11

The Game Awards are this week, with the grand showcase for 2025 coming up on Thursday, December 11 at 8PM ET. There's also a...

Slack’s CEO is joining OpenAI to find the money to pay for all those data centers

OpenAI has announced that Denise Dresser, the current CEO of Slack, will be the company's new Chief Revenue Officer. Dresser will oversee the company's...

Instagram is generating SEO-bait headlines for its users’ posts

It looks like Meta has decided to turn Instagram users into unwitting SEO spam pawns. On Tuesday, 404 Media reported that the platform is...

Uber is installing kiosks for booking rides without the mobile app

Uber is rolling out kiosks for travelers to book rideshares without using the mobile app. The company is pitching the service as a convenience...

Repair iconic 2000s-era gadgets in upcoming indie game ReStory

We love a little nostalgia mixed in with our cozy gaming, and ReStory looks like a perfect blend of those two. In this upcoming...