I've mentioned this story before, but we had massive drive failures when bringing up multiple disk arrays. We get them racked on a friday afternoon, and then I wrote a quick and dirty shell script to read/write data back and forth between them over the weekend that was to kick in after they finished striping the raid arrays. By quick and dirty I mean there was no logging, and just a bunch of commands saved as .sh. Came in on Monday to find massive failures in all of the arrays, but no insight into when they failed during the stripe or during stressing them. It was close to 50% failure rate. Turned out to be a bad batch from the factory. Multiple customers of our vendor were complaining. All the drives were replaced by the manufacturer. It just delayed the storage being available to production. After that, not one of them failed in the next 12 months before I left for another job.

> next 12 months before I left for another job

Heh, that's a clever solution to the problem of managing storage through the full 10 year disk lifecycle.