Here comes the 10TB HGST beasts!

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ClockHound

Golden Member
Nov 27, 2007
1,111
219
106
"Quantum Fireball"

The name that chills the data in my veins.....not the most reliable hard drive era.

Always thought that was a bad marketing pitch - something that must store your precious data safely and reliably called something that will destroy your data. And in my case did. ;-)

Thanks for the memories...it's all I have left.
 

Soulkeeper

Diamond Member
Nov 23, 2001
6,736
156
106
"Quantum Fireball"

The name that chills the data in my veins.....not the most reliable hard drive era.

Always thought that was a bad marketing pitch - something that must store your precious data safely and reliably called something that will destroy your data. And in my case did. ;-)

Thanks for the memories...it's all I have left.

The quantum fireball was the only hard drive I literally saw fire/sparks come out of as a trace on the pcb blew. I managed to solder a jumper wire on and it worked again for another year. Great memories indeed.
 

PliotronX

Diamond Member
Oct 17, 1999
8,883
107
106
You can say that again. Back in 2000 when bought my massive 20GB Quantum Fireball Plus LM, I never thought I'd fill it up.

Fast-forward 14 years, we're talking 10TB HDDs, an my picture folder alone is 44GB... :hmm:

Amazing... :cool:
Are there videos mixed in with the pictures? Decent size collection there ():)
 

Insert_Nickname

Diamond Member
May 6, 2012
4,971
1,695
136
"Quantum Fireball"

The name that chills the data in my veins.....not the most reliable hard drive era.

Always thought that was a bad marketing pitch - something that must store your precious data safely and reliably called something that will destroy your data. And in my case did. ;-)

Thanks for the memories...it's all I have left.

The quantum fireball was the only hard drive I literally saw fire/sparks come out of as a trace on the pcb blew. I managed to solder a jumper wire on and it worked again for another year. Great memories indeed.

Good times indeed. Though to be fair it was for performance I bought it, not reliability. Though I have to say HDD reliability issues weren't limited to Quantum alone, remember the IBM DeathStars...?
 

PliotronX

Diamond Member
Oct 17, 1999
8,883
107
106
Good times indeed. Though to be fair it was for performance I bought it, not reliability. Though I have to say HDD reliability issues weren't limited to Quantum alone, remember the IBM DeathStars...?
Funnily enough, through all my nervous years of using a DeathStar 75GXP, it is still working with just a few reallocated sectors in my mother's computer... now for why I don't have similar luck with Seagates :hmm:
 

Insert_Nickname

Diamond Member
May 6, 2012
4,971
1,695
136
Are there videos mixed in with the pictures? Decent size collection there ():)

No, just 10 years of D-SLR photos + change... :D

Funnily enough, through all my nervous years of using a DeathStar 75GXP, it is still working with just a few reallocated sectors in my mother's computer... now for why I don't have similar luck with Seagates :hmm:

They were (are) usually fine with adequate active cooling. If I remember correctly they also don't like RAID.

Funnily enough I've always had pretty good luck with Seagate... :hmm:

Though to be completely fair I have had issues with drives from every single manufacturer out there, so luck of the draw plays a large role.