High-End, High-Capacity SATA-150 Roundup
Maxtorn writes This review is published to cover a "300GB Maxtor drive, but provides a roundup covering a few high end, high capacity drives from Maxtor, Seagate, and Hitachi. Synthetic / real world performance, thermal results, and noise output are all covered on drives ranging from 200-500GB in capacity and with 8-16MB of cache memory. A solid reference for those shopping for a new drive."
Pros:
- Fastest SATA-150 drive tested to date
No issue with speed, it's good.- Several capacities available, with 300GB being the highest
Not unexpected from and industry leader.- Quiet operation
Weighty consideration for the home or office, a brace of noisy drives is unwelcome while trying to watch video or listen to music on the computer.- Supports Native Command Queuing
Fine.- Excellent value, only 48 cents per GB
Really this is a minor concern, unless you're building a storage rack and only care bang/buck. If I want cool and quiet, I'll pay extra for it.- 16 MB of cache memory provides a nice performance boost
The bottleneck isn't likely to be your cache it's your MB and OS, but always nice to have more cache.Cons:
- Runs a bit warmer than other drives
Might warrant an extra fan if running a brace or more, potentially negating and quiet running. I've got an old Quantum drive you could fry an egg on and the heat effectively is killing the bearing lubricant.- Three year warranty is good, but not the best
Really, what good is a warranty, other than it's DOA? Does anyone do backups anymore? How's that MTBF? A warranty is the least of my concerns if my drive dies in the first year.A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
I always try to buy seagate, ~$10 price difference, and the 5-year warranty is priceless. You only get a 3-year warranty on most other drives, or 1 year if you buy retail Western Digital.
And if you see Maxtor, run like the wind!
After you click through the first two ad-cluttered pages, you start to see some results. They're presented in a single bar graph with dark shaded gradients.
The graph uses the same X axis to compare three totally different quantities: CPU percentage, access time in milliseconds, and bandwidth in MB/sec. As a bonus, note that smaller values for CPU % and access time are good, but larger values of bandwidth are good.
Edward Tufte, where are you?
My favorite part is when the submitter reviews his own review:
A solid reference for those shopping for a new drive.
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