Skip to content

Dasd: 620 [better]

Note: “DASD” is a classic IBM mainframe term (Direct Access Storage Device). “DASD 620” is not a standard, widely known model number (like 3390 or 3380). I have interpreted this as a hypothetical or internal next-generation storage array for legacy or high-security environments. If this refers to a specific piece of equipment in your organization, you can swap in the specific specs. Back to the Future: Deploying the DASD 620 in a Hybrid Cloud World

April 14, 2026 Topic: Legacy Storage Architecture dasd 620

There is a quiet revolution happening in the data center basement. While everyone else is chasing NVMe-over-Fabrics and petabyte-scale object storage, a handful of architects are asking a different question: What if reliability looked like the 1980s, but performance looked like the 2020s? Note: “DASD” is a classic IBM mainframe term

4/5 Stars (Deducted one star for the lack of a dark mode on the console). Have you deployed a DASD 620 in your environment? Or are you still nursing a 3390-9? Let us know in the comments below. If this refers to a specific piece of

But if you need storage that will survive a solar flare, a power surge, and a junior admin dropping a coffee on the controller—while still talking to a mainframe from 1985—nothing else comes close.

Enter the .

The 620 supports up to 16 channel paths. In our benchmark, we yanked a live Fibre Channel cable during a batch job. The system didn't stutter. The secondary path took over within one I/O cycle. For banks processing end-of-day settlements, this is the difference between a footnote and a lawsuit.