ARTICLE POSTED October 25th,
2004
Second-hand
storage: Not just for penny pinchers anymore Mary Brandel
Have you ever gotten fed up with the
weeks-long wait for a new storage system to be delivered?
Have you ever wanted to test out a
product in your own environment to be sure it will deliver as
promised?
Have you ever needed interim storage
capacity for just a short period of time?
Most storage managers have encountered
all the above, but far fewer have discovered a solution
through a low-tech but practical means: purchasing or even
renting systems from the used-computer market. Those few have
found that second-hand storage is not just for penny-pinchers
anymore.
Not that people are thronging to the used
storage market. Robert Davie, founder of ITParade.com, a
Web-based marketplace for refurbished computer equipment in
Cary, N.C., estimates that storage systems and components
account for about 5% of the overall used computer market,
which is expected to reach about $7.5 billion in the U.S. this
year, according to Bruce Caswell, vice president of marketing
at World Data Products, a refurbished computer reseller in
Minnetonka, Minn.
But second-hand storage purchasers have
discovered not only that they can trim 60% to 70% off list
price, but that they can also more flexibly acquire, maintain
and use their storage systems.
Storage on-demand Paul Smith,
director of information services at ATA Airlines, for
instance, characterizes his firm as entrepreneurial and
cost-conscious, even to the extreme. "We don't wash our Dixie
cups after using them, but in IT, we're very aware of saving
money," Smith says. The IT staff at the $1.2 billion airline
in Indiana even does its own hardware and software
maintenance, keeping an inventory of spare parts in the event
of breakdowns.
Smith saves a lot of money by purchasing
storage systems through World Data Products. But there are
other advantages. For instance, Smith says, he's found the
remarketing sector can produce product much more quickly than
standard sales channels. This works well for ATA, which runs a
lean-and-mean storage shop with 70%-to-80% utilization rates.
In other words, when he needs a new array, he needs it
now.
So when Smith wants a couple of extra
terabytes of disk, he says, "We can pick up the phone and
expect to see it the next morning. Through the regular
channel, even with an expedite, getting delivery within a
couple of weeks would be extraordinary." In this sense, Smith
is able to operate in an almost "storage-on-demand" fashion.
"We're extremely agile, and we don't want to keep our money
tied up," he says.
Sticking with the old A more
common reason for acquiring storage from the refurbished
market is to lengthen the life of an older storage platform
that works fine but is no longer sold by the manufacturer.
"A real common one is the IBM 3990
optical library, where the newer machines are based on a
30G-byte plasma technology," points out Doug Rengel, a
consultant at Xerxes Computer Corp., a refurbished computer
reseller in Bloomington, Minn. "A lot of people are
comfortable with what they have, and when they look at the
cost of converting, as well as the compatibility issues,
they'll weigh either buying used or moving to the new
technology."
Similarly, if a customer had a whole row
of older IBM 3580 tape drives for backup, "there'd have to be
a good reason to get rid of that and invest in new tape
drives," Rengel points out. If the platform doesn't have
high-performance requirements, the customer may as well add on
as cheaply as possible.
Smith faces this situation with some
older HP storage arrays that ATA uses. "It would be a
challenge for us to do a migration, and at this point, we'd be
more willing to spend money on repairing them than upgrading
because it's easy enough to find spare components on the used
market," he says.
Testing ... testing Customers
are increasingly buying or renting these lower-priced systems
for multiple reasons, such as testing, according to people who
sell used equipment. Testing can include benchmarking,
performance testing or business continuity testing, according
to James Davie, a vice president at Canvas Systems, a reseller
in Norcross, Ga. Increasingly, he says, customers prefer
trying things out in their own environment rather than relying
on published benchmarks.
"The drive to get an accurate benchmark
has driven a lot of our rental business," Davie says. "A lot
of folks can't get hardware from the manufacturer or from the
VARs because their loaner pools are not adequate."
When Smith is considering purchasing
storage that is new to ATA's environment, such as Serial ATA
drives or iSCSI interfaces, he test-drives it by renting it
for a week. "If you want to compare technology from competing
companies, it's much easier to do it through the refurbished
market than by going to the vendors," he says. Even through a
VAR, he notes, the company is sometimes contractually
obligated not to sell certain competing products.
Rental terms vary, but at Canvas, the
term can last from a week to 90 days, at a cost of 10% to 20%
of the sale price, a portion of which can be applied toward
the purchase price, according to Davie.
Davie says he has also recently rented
backup systems to companies in Florida that needed to prepare
to withstand the series of hurricanes that region endured this
fall. "They're either doing disaster recovery testing or using
it as backup at an offsite location," Davie explains. Even
companies that have a relationship with a hot site provider
such as Sungard might need to augment that strategy. When the
rental term expires, the company may return the equipment or
purchase it, with a partial credit applied toward the purchase
price.
Filling the gap Another time to
rent is when a manufacturer is due to come out with a new
model but the user needs more storage capacity before the
model is available. Rather than do without, the user can
purchase or rent a system to fill the gap with interim
capacity.
Customers of Xerxes Computer have also
rented tape systems for a month or two to help them transition
to a new platform, says Peter Schrempp, vice president of
sales and marketing at Xerxes. In these instances, the current
tape drive was incompatible with the new system, so the
customer staged its data on a compatible tape system to
transfer the data.
As ATA's Smith points out, not all
storage purchases make sense on the used market. "For many
companies, it's best to look for low-hanging fruit where there
are excessive ownership costs and where you can align yourself
with a vendor that has technical expertise," he says. But once
you form a relationship with a seller of refurbished storage
systems, you can reap rewards of flexibility and creative ways
of saving money.
About the author Brandel is a
freelance writer based in Grand Rapids, Mich. She can be
reached at mary.brandel@comcast.net.
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