Is it ok to stack 3.5" Hard Drives?

Associate
Joined
15 Feb 2011
Posts
239
Hey

I've got a case which has space in the bottom for a 3.5" hard drive but i need to store two hard drives. Would it be ok to put something in between them some sort of washers so theirs abit of a gap between them for airflow, then stick a cable tie around them both to stop it falling off when moving the case.
 
i'v done it before and its ok as long as u can secure them some how remember they vibrate and could move and u don't want one to fall off the other while writing data because that might kill the drive
 
Hey

I've got a case which has space in the bottom for a 3.5" hard drive but i need to store two hard drives. Would it be ok to put something in between them some sort of washers so theirs abit of a gap between them for airflow, then stick a cable tie around them both to stop it falling off when moving the case.
I would not do that. Firstly - vibrations; secondly - heat. If you have very, very good airflow and the drives are 5400RPM, maybe it will be ok. But for 7200RPM drives it will most probably lead to a sooner than expected failure. It might not be right away but you will definitely shorten their lives dramatically.
 
You'll need about an inch of air between the two drives and a fan right in front of the drives to keep them reliable. If possible use a rubber washer to absorb vibrations.
 
Drives get hot. I always try to leave an empty bay between them, and have a fan blowing air across them. Some airflow makes a big difference to the temps and the life of the drive, but if they are close together, you won't get enough of a cooling effect.
 
I would not do that. Firstly - vibrations; secondly - heat. If you have very, very good airflow and the drives are 5400RPM, maybe it will be ok. But for 7200RPM drives it will most probably lead to a sooner than expected failure. It might not be right away but you will definitely shorten their lives dramatically.

http://techreport.com/news/11872/google-publishes-hard-drive-failure-study

Google's data suggest that high drive temperatures and high utilization don't necessarily translate to higher failure rates.

OP, they'll be fine close together (PC cases do this ALL the time, I don't know why people think it's suddenly an issue) but it would be a good idea to not have them resting on one another without some form of vibration-dampening material at least.
 
Back
Top Bottom