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What is a SCSI drive? What's the difference between SCSI vs SATA, and SCSI vs SAS? You can get answers from this post. In addition, if you want to use the SCSI drive as an external drive to back up computer, or want to recover data from the SCSI drive, I recommend you to use MiniTool Partition Wizard.
SCSI, short for Small Computer System Interface, is a set of standards for physically connecting and transferring data between computers and peripheral devices like hard drives, tape drives, scanners, CD drives, etc.
SCSI is most commonly used for hard drives and the hard drives with SCSI interface are SCSI drives, which are also called scuzzy drives (SCSI is pronounced 'scuzzy').
The development of SCSI standard is as follows:
SCSI hard drives have been the backbone of enterprise computing for nearly 20 years. Though they typically don’t possess much in the way of capacity, SCSI drives make up for it with speed.
As a server drive, compared with an ordinary PC drive, a SCSI hard drive has the following characteristics:
SAS, short for Serial Attached SCSI, breaks from the traditional parallel SCSI bus and performs data transfer via serial communications using point-to-point links. Both SAS and parallel SCSI use the SCSI command set. Therefore, SAS products are compatible with devices that employ earlier SCSI technologies.
In a word, SAS replaces the older Parallel SCSI bus technology and becomes a popular alternative to parallel SCSI in enterprise environments. Comparing SAS with SCSI, SAS does have many advantages, for example:
SATA, abbreviated from Serial AT Attachment, is a computer bus interface that connects host bus adapters to mass storage devices such as hard disk drives, optical drives, and solid-state drives. SATA speeds are as follows:
In terms of SCSI vs SATA drives, they have few similarities, except that both they are half duplex. As for their differences, they have all the differences between a server hard drive and a PC hard drives.
SATA drives are more used in personal computers. Even if some people use SATA drives to compose RAID, these drives are usually used in low-end servers. On the contrary, SCSI and SAS drives are usually used in medium and high-end servers and high-end workstations.
Besides, SCSI drives have almost been eliminated by SAS drives, while SATA drives are still popular currently. Many manufacturers produce SATA SSDs (including 2.5-inch SATA SSD and M.2 SATA SSDs) and it seems that these SATA SSDs will not be eliminated in recent years. Besides, for large hard drives (such as 8 TB, 10 TB, 14 TB, etc.), they still like to use SATA 3.0 interface.
But in personal computers, especially in SSD field, I think SATA will be eliminated by PCIe NVMe SSDs soon, because PCIe NVMe SSDs are much faster than SATA. Even if there is SATA Express, this trend is still difficult to change.
SCSI drives are faster than ordinary SATA hard disk drives. You can still use a SCSI drive in your computer, but if you have switched to SATA SSDs, PCIe NVMe SSDs, or SAS drives, I recommend you to use the old SCSI drives as external drive.
Although converting a SCSI hard drive to an external drive will cause some speed loss, this can avoid waste. To make an external SCSI hard drive, you need a SCSI to USB adapter. When you buy this adapter, please pay attention to the number of pins.
With this adapter, you can connect a SCSI drive to a USB port in the computer. Then, you can manage the drive as an external drive and access data in the drive.
The guide on how to use an external hard drive is displayed in the post. An external hard drive is useful in many aspects such as files storage and data backup.
No matter which drive you use, you need to manage the drive in your computer. Then, MiniTool Partition Wizard can help you do that more easily. In addition, if you want to use the SCSI drive to back up your computer or you want to recover data from the SCSI drive, MiniTool Partition Wizard is a good choice.
If you want to back up computer to the SCSI drive with MiniTool Partition Wizard, here is the tutorial:
Step 1: Click the above button to download MiniTool Partition Wizard. Launch this tool and go to its main interface. Right click the disk you want to back up and choose Copy from the context menu (this feature is free if the disk you want to clone is a non-system disk).
Step 2: Follow the wizard to choose a destination disk (the external SCSI hard drive). Please note that the data on the destination disk will be destroyed. Then, review changes and click Next button.
Step 3: Click the Apply button to execute pending operations.
If you want to recover data from the SCSI drive with MiniTool Partition Wizard (this feature is not free), here is the tutorial:
Step 1: Click Data Recovery. Then, under Hard Disk section, highlight the SCSI drive and click Scan.
Step 2: After the scanning process is completed, choose the data you want to recover and click Save button.
Is this post helpful to you? Do you have other ideas about SCSI drives? Please leave a comment in the following zone. Besides, if you have difficulty in backing up computer or recovering data, please send us an email at [email protected]. We will get back to you as soon as possible.
If you mean SCSI merely, SCSI drives are usually HDDs and the fastest SCSI interface has a speed up to 640 MB/s, which is faster than SATA interface but much slower than PCIe 3.0 x4 interface (NVMe SSDs). As to SATA SSDs, because the SCSI drive is HDDs, I think in most cases, SATA SSDs are faster still.
But if your SCSI means Serial Attached SCSI (SAS), some SAS drives themselves are SSDs. Then, this comparison is meaningless.