6.2.3.6. ...simultaneous drive failure?
Sometimes, a drive manufacturer just makes a bad batch of disksand this has happened more than once. For example, a few years ago, one drive maker used defective plastic to encapsulate the chips on the drive electronics; drives with the defective plastic failed at around the same point in their life cycles, so that several elements of RAID arrays built using these drives would fail within a period of days or even hours. Since most RAID levels provide protection against a single drive failure but not against multiple drive failures, data was lost.
For greatest safety, it's a good idea to buy disks of similar capacity from different drive manufacturers (or at least different models or batches) when building a RAID array, in order to reduce the likelihood of near-simultaneous drive failure.