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50817
February 16th, 2012 11:00
replacing a failed SCSI drive in RAID array?
Our Poweredge 2600 has finally experienced a drive failure, and of course I have no spare drive in hand. ( We had hoped to decommission this server prior to a failure, but the server has decided not to cooperate! :emotion-1: )
anyway, the drive is a Seagate Cheetah Ultra U320 SCSI drive.
I need to know what criteria are the critical ones for replacing this, since they're not making the ST373453LC anymore.
As long as it's 80pin, Ultra U320 SCSI, and as big or bigger, should it work???? If I stick with the Seagate Cheetah line, should I be okay?
Can't find any kind of replacements on the Dell store site, did I miss something?
thanks.


Daniel My
10 Elder
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6.2K Posts
1
February 16th, 2012 17:00
Hello Barbgraj
Yes, what you described should work. Here are the key points on picking a SCSI drive:
I'm pretty sure that we no longer sell SCSI drives. I know that we do not sell them new, but you can try our spare parts department to see if we have refurbished drives for sale(800 357-3355 or 800 901-3355 ext 7269938).
Thanks
theflash1932
9 Legend
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16.3K Posts
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February 16th, 2012 12:00
Dell's website is hard to shop. I would call your sales rep for pricing and options.
If they don't have drives to sell, you can get Dell drives from many third-party suppliers ... just get a part number and start with Google.
impactcomputers.com/dellparts--parts-for-dell-poweredge-parts-for-dell-poweredge-2600-storage.html
Must be 80-pin, U320, and at least as large as the drive it is replacing.
vnomura
3 Posts
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February 16th, 2012 14:00
I was in a simular situation. I replaced a drive with something close. The original was 15K and the replacement was 10K RPM. It was fine. The only thing I noticed is a lowering in performance. The drive was a member of a raid1 array. If the drive isn't compatible, it won't even start to remirror or rebuild.
I would say it's safe to try a "close match" if you have one handy.
Regards,
Victor
barbgraj
31 Posts
0
February 17th, 2012 12:00
okay, this is what I thought.
Seagate makes a newer version of the drive, the ST373455LC, that I think will do the trick. Same speed, it's Ultra320 80-pin SCSI.