A measure of redundant or duplicated data within a system, indicating inefficiency in storage and potential performance issues.
1 RD = 0.5 FDR
1 FDR = 2 RD
Example:
Convert 15 Redundant Data to Frequency Division Redundancy:
15 RD = 7.5 FDR
| Redundant Data | Frequency Division Redundancy |
|---|---|
| 0.01 RD | 0.005 FDR |
| 0.1 RD | 0.05 FDR |
| 1 RD | 0.5 FDR |
| 2 RD | 1 FDR |
| 3 RD | 1.5 FDR |
| 5 RD | 2.5 FDR |
| 10 RD | 5 FDR |
| 20 RD | 10 FDR |
| 30 RD | 15 FDR |
| 40 RD | 20 FDR |
| 50 RD | 25 FDR |
| 60 RD | 30 FDR |
| 70 RD | 35 FDR |
| 80 RD | 40 FDR |
| 90 RD | 45 FDR |
| 100 RD | 50 FDR |
| 250 RD | 125 FDR |
| 500 RD | 250 FDR |
| 750 RD | 375 FDR |
| 1000 RD | 500 FDR |
| 10000 RD | 5,000 FDR |
| 100000 RD | 50,000 FDR |