My 60GB Maxtor DM60 (5400RMP quiet disk) went bad and I used Maxtor's warranty. However, the replacement I've just received from Maxtor is actually a 60GB DM80 disk. The difference is simple:
DM60/60GB = 15GB/platter = 4 platters
DM80/60GB = 20GB/platter = 3 platters and theoretically higher transfer rates and less heat/power. A tiny step forward for mankind.
I've just put the DM80 into my "miniserver" and went through a Mandrake Linux installation (my server is finally hardware-complete!) The noise levels on the DM80 are very similar to the DM60. 90% of the noise comes from spinning whine, and the seeks are barely audible over that noise, unless your head is next to the disk. I now realise that even this disk could benefit from a SilentDrive silencing enclosure (alas my booksize case won't accomodate that). In a quiet room, its acoustics certainly arent flawless even if great. I'll report back with noise impressions after I close the case.
Does anyone know if Maxtor ships their disks in "quiet mode" these days?
DM60/60GB = 15GB/platter = 4 platters
DM80/60GB = 20GB/platter = 3 platters and theoretically higher transfer rates and less heat/power. A tiny step forward for mankind.
I've just put the DM80 into my "miniserver" and went through a Mandrake Linux installation (my server is finally hardware-complete!) The noise levels on the DM80 are very similar to the DM60. 90% of the noise comes from spinning whine, and the seeks are barely audible over that noise, unless your head is next to the disk. I now realise that even this disk could benefit from a SilentDrive silencing enclosure (alas my booksize case won't accomodate that). In a quiet room, its acoustics certainly arent flawless even if great. I'll report back with noise impressions after I close the case.
Does anyone know if Maxtor ships their disks in "quiet mode" these days?