I would never take chance of buying used hard drives off the bay do to chance of poor shipping.
Don't most hd collect some dirt from use and doesn't that dirt have a chance of doing damage when the drives are moved around like in shipping.
But you can buy NOS (new old stock) 2TB enterprise drives for $65 each, with free shipping, and from a more reliable manufacturer: http://www.goharddrive.com/HITACHI-2TB-7200RPM-64MB-SATA3-Hard-Drive-p/g01-0728.htm
Price. Price price price. $15 is cheap. $50 to $60 for a single SSD for a sh!tty old Compaq isn't cheap. I only purchased the 150/160gb drives because they were so completely crazily inexpensive.
As for file storage, one single SSD around 300GB would cost what I paid for ALL of the drives I mentioned. That has to be part of the equation.
So maybe I should have been more clear in my original post but pricing is part of this. Basically I had around $150 of mad money and did what I thought could get me a lot with it. In the end i might have been silly, but it's just $150.
Remember, my current storage drives are all 4+ years old so not exactly modern marvels.
I still have one more hard drive to purchase. I need something super fast for my main system (not SSD!) at a price point of $140 or below.
Looking at backblaze's stats on HDs (https://www.backblaze.com/blog/best-hard-drive/ ), if you were looking for a new unit, I would go with HGST, Toshiba, WD*, and I would stay away from seagate versions lower than 4TB.
Sorry, I have 1.5TB, 2TB and 4TB Seagate drives doing well. I went with the NAS version of the 4TB drive (I think I have three of them). I do have 4TB of their cheapest desktop model (I have it in an external enclosure just for backups). I know that there were issues with the 3TB Seagates, but was there many issues with any of the other models? My last drive I bought was a 4TB HGST NAS drive.
Yes, and?
I got a stack of failed seagates sitting right here... but, as their (backblaze) results show, and what the recovery guys say, I don't recommend seagates, unless you find a very, very good deal on them.
Well, I guess I'm not in your sample group. No problems here with recent Seagate drives. Gotta crapload of them and not one issue that you (obviously) experienced.
Just an update. I installed one of the 150gb Raptors in dad's old as dirt Compaq Presario. Holy shit did it speed the heck up. Windows 7, just 4gb of RAM but it's so much faster now. Is it as fast as modern systems or an SSD? No, of course not. But it's now usable.
I have all four 300gb Raptors here and am testing the two that arrived today. So far they seem fine.
I've also bought the two 1TB Velociraptors I mentioned in a prior post. They each have 4.5 years left on the warranties. Go ahead, rip into me. But I am going t RAID 0 them and see how it goes. If they disappoint, I'll stick them on eBay.
Next year I'm sure SSD's will be even cheaper and I can snag a couple 500gb drives. And at the end of this year I will likely replace my basic storage drives with WD Blues.
Don't let the haters get to you.
VelociRaptors are bada$$ drives, regardless of used status or not.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/5729/western-digital-velociraptor-1tb-wd1000dhtz-review/5
As long as the eBay sellers have return option for DOA drives, buy away.
These are overbuilt server drives in reality, they will be fine in desktop usage scenarios.
I was hoping to score 3 x WD1000DHTZ this year for my Steam RAID 0 array, but the eBay supply seems to have greatly diminished.
I have also run the Samsung 1 TB F1's in RAID 0, no issues.
I also use HDD Guardian as a SMART tool, is very handy.
https://hddguardian.codeplex.com/
The seller I snagged the two 1TB Raptors from has a no DOA policy (and eBay would make any seller accept a DOA anyway).
So far the two 300gb Raptors in a RAID 0 seem super fast in testing via Premiere Pro (using them as a source drive). I can play DSLR video with no stuttering. Normally I had to render DSLR to get smooth playback. No longer.
What I will end up doing is using the 300GB raptors in a RAID 0 as my Scratch disc and the 1TB Raptors in a RAID 0 for the project files, which will allow me to edit at full rez instead of shitty 1/2 rez.
These drives do not seem loud to me. If my room's AC is off and the system fans are very low I can sometimes hear them, so noise has proven not to be an issue.
Oh and thanks for the HDD Guardian link. I'm going to give it a try.![]()
If you want some new ones, Go Hard Drive has 'em. I have ordered stuff from them, never had an issue; one disk died within return time and it was replaced no argument.
http://www.goharddrive.com/VelociRaptor-10000RPM-Hard-Drive-s/220.htm
Price. Price price price. $15 is cheap. $50 to $60 for a single SSD for a sh!tty old Compaq isn't cheap. I only purchased the 150/160gb drives because they were so completely crazily inexpensive.
Price. Price price price. $15 is cheap. $50 to $60 for a single SSD for a sh!tty old Compaq isn't cheap. I only purchased the 150/160gb drives because they were so completely crazily inexpensive.
At current prices, a used 160GB Raptor from 2011 is about the same price as the typical NOS 160GB 7200 rpm drive.
But the 160GB Raptors from 2011 have better platter density (200GB 2.5" platter vs. 160GB 3.5" platter for the typical NOS 7200 rpm drive) and more cache (32MB vs 8MB).
The 160GB raptors from 2008 have a lower spec (160GB 2.5" platter and 16MB cache) than the 2011 160GB Raptors (200GB 2.5" platter and 32MB cache), but it is still better than the typical NOS 160GB 7200 rpm drive (160GB 3.5" platter and 8MB cache).
Now whether this makes a difference in the typical operation of a low spec desktop machine is something I think would be interesting to find out.
Also keep in mind that some 160GB 7200rpm drives are based on short stroking a larger platter (up to 500GB in some cases). However, all the drives I have seen based on short stroking a larger platter still have 8MB cache.
P.S. Raptor model numbers, specs and date introduced can be found here--> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Digital_Raptor#Models_2)
I remember being really excited about the 1st gen raptors.
Something happened with the subsequent gens where they just couldn't keep up with their desktop lines.
The smaller platters, lower density and longer validation times just kept them from keeping pace on both performance and size.