A major drawback of the SMR is that it is still a very young technology and that it is not always clearly specified on all hard drives. In fact, it is often the case that hard drives marked as suitable for the NAS are actually staggered magnetic recording models. In principle, an SMR hard drive can also be used in the NAS, but due to its design, changing workload requirements mean that the limit is quickly reached.
If you use several types of hard disk, for example, to augment a server with SSD, you should avoid combining PMR and SMR , as some models have proven to give performance problems in these cases.
In theory, an SMR can be used like any other hard disk, that is, it can be formatted in FAT32 and run on Windows. In direct comparison to a conventional PMR hard drive, the data transmission speed varies greatly for the reasons mentioned above, at least when the write access becomes erratic. With an SMR hard drive, if processes are linear, speed is not affected. Likewise, there are no notable differences in reading. In any case, while it is true that shingled magnetic recording works better than what is usually believed compared to other storage technologies, it is not capable of ending the dominance of SSD hard drives as drives for games or programs, but also it is true that it was not designed for this.