Sony - AIT-5 SDX-1100 review
400GB on a single tape
Review date: 06 March, 2007. Review by: IT Reviews Staff
If it wasn't for the badge you'd be hard pressed to tell the AIT-5 apart from earlier models. It takes the same size cartridges, can be had in black or beige and, although a 3.5-inch device, comes ready to fit into a standard 5.25-inch, half-height storage bay.
The bare internal AIT-5 drive we were supplied is mostly sold pre-installed by server vendors, with an end user StorStation bundle also available complete with mounting rails for HP ProLiant servers and a copy of Symantec's Backup Exec for Windows. An external drive is yet another option, with the AIT-5 drive likely to be added to Sony's range of tape automation products later this year.
Offering double the capacity of its AIT-4 predecessor the new drive appears to have a lot going for it, but the Ultra160 SCSI LVD/SE interface is unchanged. That not only limits throughput but also meant having to install a SCSI adapter in the SATA-equipped server we used for our tests. Not a major issue, but a concern in a market where Serial ATA technology now reigns supreme.
We also had concerns when it came to throughput. The 24MB/sec native transfer rate is good, but no faster than the AIT-4 and now out-stripped by other tape formats and cheaper, disk-based backup solutions.
The 2.6:1 compression ratio claimed for Sony's ALDC (Adaptive Lossless data Compression) technology also needs to be taken with a large pinch of salt. If it were to be achieved, it would significantly boost both capacity and throughput, but on our tests we only saw improvements of around 30-40 percent; roughly on a par with other tape and disk compression technologies.
In its favour, the contents of most small business servers will fit onto a single AIT-5 cartridge even without compression. Added to which the new drive can read and write to cartridges designed for use in AIT-3, AIT-3EX and AIT-4 products with WORM (Write Once Read Many) cartridges also available for long term archiving.
We found the new AME III (Advanced Metal Evaporated) tape cartridges online for around £40 plus VAT, working out at a very affordable 10p per gigabyte.
Other than that, however, it's a far from cheap solution that could more than double the cost of a small business server. That's a major consideration when alternative disk-based solutions can match or exceed both the capacity and performance for a lot less.
Verdict
With double the capacity of its predecessor, the Sony AIT-5 drive will appeal to existing customers looking to keep up with growing backup demands. However, performance is unchanged and the SCSI interface is looking a little old-hat in today's SATA-dominated small business server market.
Company: Sony
Contact: 01932 816000

