HGST Ultrastar HDD is a 10TB helium monster, aims to cope with data overload

HGST Ultrastar He10
HGST has been shipping helium-filled drives since the summer of last year

Western Digital has announced the shipping of the new HGST Ultrastar He10, which is the world's first ever 10TB PMR (perpendicular magnetic recording) hard disk drive.

This is WDC's third-gen helium drive, offering 2TB more space than the biggest disk (8TB) of the previous generation managed. It will be available as a standalone drive or as part of HGST's Active Archive System.

These massive capacity drives are aimed at the data centre and enterprise usage, driving forward public and private cloud solutions, but will have an impact for consumers too, in terms of the likes of Netflix being able to swiftly build up capacity and keep streaming movies to end users smoothly.

Tide of big data

10TB disks will also help in the battle against the tide of big data – set to surge as more devices come online creating more data, from new smartphones to Internet of Things devices – which threatens to engulf businesses. As we've discussed before, the world is effectively running out of data storage space.

Of course, size isn't everything, but these drives are also designed to perform in terms of reliability and power efficiency. The Ultrastar He10 boasts a 2.5 million mean-time-between-failures rating, which is claimed as the highest reliability rating of all current drives, and it's backed by a five-year warranty as you would expect from a disk of this class.

This helium drive also uses 56% less watts per TB than a traditional air-filled hard disk, so certainly doesn't disappoint in the efficiency stakes.

John Rydning, IDC's research vice president, commented: "HGST continues to lead the industry in delivering the next highest capacity hard drive for enterprise applications, beginning with 4TB, then 6TB, 8TB, and now 10TB capacity-optimised enterprise HDDs.

"HGST's new Ultrastar 10TB He10 will help address the need for higher capacity, and higher density storage racks in enterprise data centres."

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).