Etters, Pa. — FCI has developed a broad offering of 29-position, vertical backplane receptacle connectors for the new high-speed, Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) hard disk drive (HDD) interface that is ...
For more than 20 years, the parallel bus interface has been the mainstream storage interconnect for most storage systems. But increasing bandwidth and flexibility demands have exposed inefficiencies ...
American Megatrends (AMI) has added latest member to its line of backplane controller ICs: the MegaRAC MG9087. The MG9087 is touted as low-cost, ultra-small, single-chip solution for use on SAS and ...
Today, we’ll compare the new Serial Attached SCSI disk technology to other disk technologies now available. For the next few years, Fibre Channel and Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) will continue to be the ...
I have some 2.5" SAS drives that I would love to run on a 3.5" SATA/SAS backplane. Unfortunately, my drive trays are made for 3.5" drives.<BR>Anyone know of a conversion bracket or something I can use ...
In San Jose last week, Bell Micro, Fujitsu, LSI Logic and Supermicro got together to hold a coming out party for Serial Attach SCSI, or SAS, the newest incarnation of the SCSI device interface. The ...
Replacing SCSI-drive connections in enterprise storage applications, the company's 29-position, vertical backplane receptacle connectors enable the implementation of serial attached SCSI (SAS) ...
Hitachi Data Systems has launched what it is calling a "completely new" mid-range system, to replace its current offering. The HDS Adaptable Modular Storage (AMS) 2000 series, unveiled on Monday, ...
SilverStone have once again tried to create an innovative and flexible storage product, part of the Stackable Drive Series – SD01. This time it is a high-grade hard drive ‘pad’ with a screwless design ...
The system also provides better cooling with hot-swappable fans (Fig. 3). The processor placement on the motherboard lines up with the rear cooling fans so everything can work together to provide ...
I think that would depend a lot on the chassis/backplane you are using. Every drive tray I've seen (PowerEdge, Proliant, EMC, etc.) is a bit different.
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