You won't get that sentiment from me. As I have said in the past, my experience with LTO2 and 3583 library is that they are [EMAIL PROTECTED]&* garbage. Even IBM stated that LTO was never designed to handle the load we are putting through them (we have over 400 tapes in use per 3583-L72 library). Every drive we purchased has been replaced AT LEAST twice, in the past 1.5-years we have had LTO drives/libraries. The libraries need to be "power cycled" at least once a week, sometimes more (absolutely every piece of firmware/software between the AIX systems and the libraries themselves, have been updated to the latest available - no it's not power - everything is on UPS/battery/conditioned).
This is why we are moving to 3592-E05 drives. Besides the capacity difference, the reliability we have seen with 3590 drives (even those that are 10+ years old), far exceeds the LTO's. We mount 1000's of 3590 tapes, daily. If we have 1-failure in 2-3 weeks, that is rare. Granted the 3592-E05 drives are new and "disposable/FRU" technology vs. field-repairable, so time will tell. "Allen S. Rout" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent by: "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU> 08/08/2006 02:08 PM Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU> To ADSM-L@VM.MARIST.EDU cc Subject Re: [ADSM-L] FW: Tape Drive Choices: What, and why? >> On Tue, 8 Aug 2006 11:37:37 -0400, Paul Zarnowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > This was more true with LTO-1 than with -2 or -3. The later > generation drives can vary their speed to try to match the data rate, > thus avoiding some backhitching. But Tom is correct that the motors > in the 3592 drives are probably bigger and more powerful, and can > thus backhitch more quickly. (this is my guess, not fact) If I recall correctly, the superior 3592 backhitch was related to a special track ("servo track"?) which permitted precise high-speed positioning. This also aids general purpose seek behavior. The varying speeds would certainly help. The basic summary of the responses I've gotten offline is that LTO is doing much better than it had initially; it seems that the current 3592s still have an edge, but not nearly so broad as was the case. Most interestingly, I didn't see any particular discussion about any tech _other_ than LTO or 3592, apart from one "Pulled back a bloody stump" story about helical-scan. This meshes neatly with a campus-level query I sent out a few weeks back; to my surprise, LTO utterly dominated that list of tape techs, too. Discussion of other tech lines was all in the past tense. It appears that the LTO alliance has kicked tush and taken names. Rawk On. - Allen S. Rout