Western Digital Purple PR1334M Technical Reference Manual page 59

Surveillance hard drives
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WD Purple PR1334M
Glossary
to an accessible position. For a disk rotating at 10,000 RPM, the average latency is 3 millisec-
onds.
IntelliSeek — WD technology that proactively calculates an optimum seek speed to eliminate hasty movement
of the actuator that produces noise and requires power.
Logical Block Address — An alternative addressing methodology of identifying a given loca-
tion on a SATA drive that permits disk sizes greater than 528 MB.
Native Command Queuing (NCQ ) — NCQ allows the drive to re-order read commands, thereby
increasing random read IOPs. NCQ is a true Enterprise feature for environments such as database,
Web servers, and e-mail servers.
— The recording head never touches the disk media ensuring
NoTouch™ Ramp Load Technology
significantly less wear to the recording head and media as well as better drive protection in
transit.
Preemptive Wear Leveling (PWL) — WD feature that provides a solution for protecting the
recording media against mechanical wear.
PRML (Partial Response Maximum Likelihood) — A read channel using sampled data, active
equalization and Veterbi detection to accurately retrieve the user data off the disk.
RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) — WD hard drive products manufactured and sold
worldwide after June 8, 2011, meet or exceed Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) compli-
ance requirements as mandated by the RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU.
Rotational Latency — The amount of delay in obtaining information from a disk drive that can
be attributed to the rotation of the disk. For a disk rotating at 10,000 RPM, the average
latency is 3 milliseconds.
RPM (Revolutions per Minute) — Rotational speed of the media (disk), also known as the spin-
dle speed. Hard drives spin at one constant speed. The slower the RPM, the higher the
mechanical latencies. Disk RPM is a critical component of hard drive performance because it
directly impacts the rotational latency and the disk transfer rate.
Seek Time — The time it takes for the read/write head to move to a specific block of data on
the hard drive. The average seek time is computed by dividing the time it takes to complete
a large number of random seeks by the number of seeks performed.
Data Sector — A 512-byte packet of data.
Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology (S.M.A.R.T.) — A technology to assist
the user in preventing possible system down time due to hard drive failure.
Serial ATA (SATA) — SATA is the industry standard bus interface for hard drives. It is designed
to replace Parallel ATA, and has many advantages including increased transfer rate, improved
signal integrity, enhanced data protection, and hot plugging.
S.M.A.R.T. Command Transport (SCT) — The SCT Command Transport feature set provides a
method for a host to send commands and data to a device and for a device to send data and
status to a host using log pages.
Staggered Spinup — SATA feature that allows the system to control whether the drive will
spin up immediately or wait until the interface is fully ready.
Unrecoverable Error — A read error that cannot be overcome by an ECC scheme or by
rereading the data when host retries are enabled.
World Wide Name (WWN) — The World Wide Name (WWN) defined in ATA/ATAPI-7 is a
modification of the IEEE extended unique identifier 64 bit standard (EUI-64) and is comprised
of three major components: naming authority, organizationally unique identifier (OUI) and
serial number. WD's OUI is 0014EEh.
Write Cache — A feature in CacheFlow that posts "command complete" prior to completing
the actual write.
2679-800084-A04
RELEASED 5/3/17 (WD CONFIDENTIAL)
47

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