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2tb WD Caviar Green $99 - Amazon

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I saw that this morning.. that is so insane! I thought I was getting a great deal when I paid $90 for a 1TB drive a while back.
 
$120 on Newegg shipped, so decent deal. Can't believe how the floor has dropped out on these huge hard drives.
 
damn, just bought 4 of these 2 weeks ago @ 120 per... excellent drives, so far so good in a RAID 5 setup...i may have to buy a couple more...
 
The deal is over now, 100% sold out. Close thread? Sorry, nub here in these forums.

good post for a newb tho' 🙂

Click EDIT on the original thread, then GO ADVANCED, and edit the title...most put DEAD in front of the original title

BTW: Welcome!
 
The following is a review from a software engineer on June 10, 2010 found on Amazon.com for this drive. Unless you think that the problem has been fixed and you really know what you are doing, I'd urge caution. That's probably why they have gone down in price.
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This review is from: Western Digital 2 TB Caviar Green SATA Intellipower 64 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Desktop Hard Drive WD20EARS (Electronics)
I'm a software engineer and I have enormous archives of data. I currently have more than fifty drives on the shelf behind me, totaling about 20 terabytes of data.

For the last two years, I've used almost exclusively the Western Digital Green drives. Perhaps a half dozen each of the 750gb, 1tb, 1.5tb drives. They've been fantastic for data storage.

When the 2tb version reached the right price point, I ordered a couple of those. I was aware of the issues with sector size, detection, and formatting in Windows, but I use Solaris, Linux, and OSX almost exclusively. These drives were being used in OSX, which does have support for these drives.

However, when I plugged both drives in, I had a hell of a time formatting them through the Disk Utility and had to do it manually on the command line.

The real problems began after the drives were formatted and I had moved a ton of data to them. On one of the drives, I renamed a folder which contained about 1.25tb of data. Instantly, the folder disappeared and the drive appeared empty. That's right. I renamed the folder all my data was in and that magically deleted all my content.

Upon closer inspection, the data was still there - it just didn't appear in the file system. Thankfully, I was able to recover the data with some command-line-fu. I then reformatted the drive and gave it a torture test until the time I had to get these back in the box to return to Amazon before the refund period expired. I found both of the drives to be questionable, but the one drive above to be particularly bad. It could have been just a bad drive or it could be a consistent problem across all of the 2tb WD Greens. My test sample (two drives) isn't adequate to extrapolate.

I will say that the experience was enough to drive me away from the 2tb version. I've instead gone back to buying the 1.5tb WD Greens and replaced both 2tb drives with three of those.

I don't believe the EARS vs EADS version has anything to do with it as I've been using the 1.5tb versions for a long time now and that includes both EARS and EADS drives. They have been stable and I have never had any issues with them.

I've had good experiences until recently with Western Digital's drives, but I'm too gun-shy from the latest experience to try their 2tb drives again any time soon. Back to the trusty 1.5tbs.
 
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