I want to know how much hard drive I can get with this: to .
- Field Value
ATA Device Properties
Model ID Maxtor 6L200M0
Serial Number L40DR9TG
Revision BANC1G10
Parameters 387621 cylinders, 16 heads, 63 sectors per track, 512 bytes per sector
LBA Sectors 390721968
Buffer 8 MB (Dual Ported, Read Ahead)
Multiple Sectors 16
ECC Bytes 4
Max. PIO Transfer Mode PIO 4
Max. UDMA Transfer Mode UDMA 5 (ATA-100)
Active UDMA Transfer Mode UDMA 5 (ATA-100)
Unformatted Capacity 190782 MB
ATA Device Features
SMART Supported
Security Mode Not Supported
Power Management Supported
Advanced Power Management Supported
Write Cache Supported
Host Protected Area Not Supported
Power-Up In Standby Not Supported
Automatic Acoustic Management Supported
48-bit LBA Supported
Device Configuration Overlay Supported
ATA Device Physical Info
Manufacturer Maxtor
Hard Disk Family DiamondMax 10
Form Factor 3.5"
Formatted Capacity 200 GB
Physical Dimensions 147 x 101.6 x 26.1 mm
Max. Weight 630 g
Average Rotational Latency 4.17 ms
Rotational Speed 7200 RPM
Average Seek 9 ms
Interface SATA
Buffer-to-Host Data Rate 150 MB/s
Buffer Size 8 MB
ATA Device Manufacturer
Company Name Maxtor Corporation
Product Information http://www.maxtor.com/en/products/
Best HDD for $50-75?
Moderator: Thanas
- Einhander Sn0m4n
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Best HDD for $50-75?
Simple: I have this:
- Dominus Atheos
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Your post makes no sense, so I'm just going to answer the title.
There's next to no difference between HDDs. The only things you should look for is gigabytes for dollar, and reliability.
For under $75 bucks, this would probably be one of the best hard drive you could get. 5 year warranty, 320 gigabytes, SATA connection (The same as those specs listed in the OP), and has won a customer choice award from Newegg.
There's next to no difference between HDDs. The only things you should look for is gigabytes for dollar, and reliability.
For under $75 bucks, this would probably be one of the best hard drive you could get. 5 year warranty, 320 gigabytes, SATA connection (The same as those specs listed in the OP), and has won a customer choice award from Newegg.
It's a 200GB SATA drive. SATA is ATA. Serial ATA (Advanced Technology Attachment).
Clearly you should stripe the new drive with the old one and then complain when you lose everything because you didn't do backups and one of the drives died.(rant)
Also Ein, your sig appears to be broken.
“Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.” - Oscar Wilde.
- Dominus Atheos
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Phantasee wrote:Where the fuck does it say serial? All I see is ATA, nothing implying it's SATA. And I see where I went wrong, I misread the unformatted size.
Great reading comprehension there.
- Field Value
ATA Device Properties
Model ID Maxtor 6L200M0
Serial Number L40DR9TG
Revision BANC1G10
....
Interface SATA
Buffer-to-Host Data Rate 150 MB/s
You also fail at using the ctrl-f key combo followed by typing "SATA" too.
A local computer shop in Perth has 500gb WD for $94 AUD.Stark wrote:But this is cheaper, somehow, in a world where $100 gets you 500gb! DON'T YOU SEE???
"Okay, I'll have the truth with a side order of clarity." ~ Dr. Daniel Jackson.
"Reality has a well-known liberal bias." ~ Stephen Colbert
"One Drive, One Partition, the One True Path" ~ ars technica forums - warrens - on hhd partitioning schemes.
"Reality has a well-known liberal bias." ~ Stephen Colbert
"One Drive, One Partition, the One True Path" ~ ars technica forums - warrens - on hhd partitioning schemes.
Don't forget that striping = DOUBLE THE SPEED. ALL THE TIME. Regardless of what the people who actually know how raid works say.But this is cheaper, somehow, in a world where $100 gets you 500gb! DON'T YOU SEE???
“Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.” - Oscar Wilde.
- Einhander Sn0m4n
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All i know is this. 3 of my last 4 hdd failures have been seagate, the 4th was maxtor which seagate bought the company and apparently the rights and ability to fail. the seagates were all this year. anecdotal yes, but 2 friends have also had their seagates fail as well, i don't personally know anyone else that has had a hdd fail this year that wasn't using seagate.
seagate also has a crappy replacement policy, you pay shipping to them then they ship back to you instead of cross shipping with a credit card like they used to do. it's replaced with a refurb which is some one elses failed drive. a drive fails enough times and you could have bought a new one.
western digital and hitachi are my drives of choice these days.
seagate also has a crappy replacement policy, you pay shipping to them then they ship back to you instead of cross shipping with a credit card like they used to do. it's replaced with a refurb which is some one elses failed drive. a drive fails enough times and you could have bought a new one.
western digital and hitachi are my drives of choice these days.
May you live in interesting times.
geez, you guys and your annual hard drive failures. Not once has any hard drive in any of my family's computers ever failed. I think we bought western digital and maxtor.
Vendetta wrote:Richard Gatling was a pioneer in US national healthcare. On discovering that most soldiers during the American Civil War were dying of disease rather than gunshots, he turned his mind to, rather than providing better sanitary conditions and medical care for troops, creating a machine to make sure they got shot faster.
Maxtor man here, never had a failure. I do recommend you splurge, Einy, and just skip on buying another gun for a few months to make up the difference.
"Doctors keep their scalpels and other instruments handy, for emergencies. Keep your philosophy ready too—ready to understand heaven and earth. In everything you do, even the smallest thing, remember the chain that links them. Nothing earthly succeeds by ignoring heaven, nothing heavenly by ignoring the earth." M.A.A.A
- Executor32
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I have to second your opinion here. I have two of these myself, and I've never had any issues.Dominus Atheos wrote:Your post makes no sense, so I'm just going to answer the title.
There's next to no difference between HDDs. The only things you should look for is gigabytes for dollar, and reliability.
For under $75 bucks, this would probably be one of the best hard drive you could get. 5 year warranty, 320 gigabytes, SATA connection (The same as those specs listed in the OP), and has won a customer choice award from Newegg.
どうして?お前が夜に自身お触れるから。
Long ago in a distant land, I, Aku, the shape-shifting Master of Darkness, unleashed an unspeakable evil,
but a foolish samurai warrior wielding a magic sword stepped forth to oppose me. Before the final blow
was struck, I tore open a portal in time and flung him into the future, where my evil is law! Now, the fool
seeks to return to the past, and undo the future that is Aku...
-Aku, Master of Masters, Deliverer of Darkness, Shogun of Sorrow
Long ago in a distant land, I, Aku, the shape-shifting Master of Darkness, unleashed an unspeakable evil,
but a foolish samurai warrior wielding a magic sword stepped forth to oppose me. Before the final blow
was struck, I tore open a portal in time and flung him into the future, where my evil is law! Now, the fool
seeks to return to the past, and undo the future that is Aku...
-Aku, Master of Masters, Deliverer of Darkness, Shogun of Sorrow
- Einhander Sn0m4n
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What is the best cost anyone has seen on an IDE laptop drive of around 120 Gigs? Any places better than New Egg?
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Ecclesiastes 9:5 (KJV)
Thomas Paine
"For the living know that they shall die: but the dead know not any thing, neither have they any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten."
Ecclesiastes 9:5 (KJV)
- Uraniun235
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I've seen one of every brand die, I guess that means you should shoot yourself in the head or something
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"On a serious note (well not really) I did sometimes jump in and rate nBSG episodes a '5' before the episode even aired or I saw it." - RogueIce explaining that episode ratings on SDN tv show threads are bunk
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Eh, I got my gun kick out anyway, spent barely over 60% of my gun budget anyway, and all I need now is to arrange a ride to a computer store to get a hard drive. No, the Radio Shack just down the road has none; the damn thing is a failboat.loomer wrote:Maxtor man here, never had a failure. I do recommend you splurge, Einy, and just skip on buying another gun for a few months to make up the difference.
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yeah this is basically what I was getting at[R_H] wrote:Aren't the failure rates pretty much the same for all of the brands?Uraniun235 wrote:I've seen one of every brand die, I guess that means you should shoot yourself in the head or something
On another note, there are performance differences between some 7200RPM drives. For example, newer drive models with the densest platters tend to have an edge in performance. I think these are drives that come in multiples of 320GB (i.e. 320GB platters), but I could be wrong.
"There is no "taboo" on using nuclear weapons." -Julhelm
What is Project Zohar?
"On a serious note (well not really) I did sometimes jump in and rate nBSG episodes a '5' before the episode even aired or I saw it." - RogueIce explaining that episode ratings on SDN tv show threads are bunk
"On a serious note (well not really) I did sometimes jump in and rate nBSG episodes a '5' before the episode even aired or I saw it." - RogueIce explaining that episode ratings on SDN tv show threads are bunk
There may be some reliability differences between OEM and retail drives due to packaging. Retail-packaged drives stay in their box with all the padding until the customer opens them; OEM drives get physically handled at various points in the warehouse (take out of the foam container, move around by not-so-well-paid-workers, put in new foam container, put/toss in box, etc.)Uraniun235 wrote:yeah this is basically what I was getting atAren't the failure rates pretty much the same for all of the brands?
The Samsung Spinpoint F1 (which uses three platters) has very good performance: it's pretty much the top of the 7200RPM drive for general desktop performance (the Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 edging it out for heavy multitasking loads).On another note, there are performance differences between some 7200RPM drives. For example, newer drive models with the densest platters tend to have an edge in performance. I think these are drives that come in multiples of 320GB (i.e. 320GB platters), but I could be wrong.
Of course, then there's the new VelociRaptor 300GB 10K drive, which apparently crushes all comers.
The newest drives with the densest platters being the 640GB drives, like the new Spinpoint F1, the Samsung HD642JJ?phongn wrote:The Samsung Spinpoint F1 (which uses three platters) has very good performance: it's pretty much the top of the 7200RPM drive for general desktop performance (the Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 edging it out for heavy multitasking loads).On another note, there are performance differences between some 7200RPM drives. For example, newer drive models with the densest platters tend to have an edge in performance. I think these are drives that come in multiples of 320GB (i.e. 320GB platters), but I could be wrong.
Of course, then there's the new VelociRaptor 300GB 10K drive, which apparently crushes all comers.
- Einhander Sn0m4n
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Moar failboat rides: Circuit City has crap selection for craptacular megabyte/dollar ratio. 160GB for $80? Maybe the 750GB for $140 was a better point on that curve, but I wasn't interested in paying that much for a hard drive.
Another thing to consider is I put The Word on Dave: Internet Shopping. Yes, I'm finally pulling him kicking and screaming over the bridge to the 21st century. I told him if it's good for Boss Man to order a fucking Minn Kota trolling motor for his pirogue at work, it's good enough for us!
Another thing to consider is I put The Word on Dave: Internet Shopping. Yes, I'm finally pulling him kicking and screaming over the bridge to the 21st century. I told him if it's good for Boss Man to order a fucking Minn Kota trolling motor for his pirogue at work, it's good enough for us!
- Einhander Sn0m4n
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Okay, I've narrowed the field to two choices. Both have a highly-advantageous gigabyte/dollar ratio of about 5.5. There's a ten-dollar diff between the two, but Newegg has a seven dollar shipping charge on the cheaper one, making the diff effectively three bucks: completely trivial on the ass-end of a ~$80-$90 price.
I now want to move onto reliability concerns, but it appears this'll be a case of using the extremely rigorous scientific methodology known as Eenie Meenie Minie Moe.
EDIT: I sprung for the Barracuda drive, I think. I'm wondering if NoScript didn't eat the order yet; I'll look on newegg tomorrow.
I now want to move onto reliability concerns, but it appears this'll be a case of using the extremely rigorous scientific methodology known as Eenie Meenie Minie Moe.
EDIT: I sprung for the Barracuda drive, I think. I'm wondering if NoScript didn't eat the order yet; I'll look on newegg tomorrow.
- Einhander Sn0m4n
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