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(Old Model) Seagate 500GB Desktop HDD Sata 6Gb/s 16MB Cache 3.5-Inch Internal Bare Drive (ST500DM002)
Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $75.99 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $9.70 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $0.00 | |
| | ||
| Total | $85.69 | |
Shipping & Fee Details
| Price | $75.99 | |
| AmazonGlobal Shipping | $9.70 | |
| Estimated Import Fees Deposit | $0.00 | |
| | ||
| Total | $85.69 | |
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Product details
| Digital Storage Capacity | 500 GB |
| Hard Disk Interface | Serial ATA-600 |
| Connectivity Technology | ESATA, USB, Firewire, SATA |
| Brand | Seagate |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 3.5 Inches |
| Hard Disk Description | Mechanical Hard Disk |
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- Ideal for everyday desktop and computing storage
- Up to 6TB capacity, each TB (terabyte) capacity stores 120 HD video, or 200,000 photos, or 250,000 songs
- 7200 RPM on all capacities except for 4 TB
- Store data faster with SATA 6GB/s interface
- 2 year warranty; 64MB cache
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Important information
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Compare with similar items
This item (Old Model) Seagate 500GB Desktop HDD Sata 6Gb/s 16MB Cache 3.5-Inch Internal Bare Drive (ST500DM002) | Seagate Barracuda ST500DM002 500 GB 3.5 Internal Hard Drive - SATA - 7200 rpm - | WD Blue 500GB Desktop Hard Disk Drive - 7200 RPM SATA 6 Gb/s 16MB Cache 3.5 Inch - WD5000AAKX | WD Blue 500GB Desktop Hard Disk Drive - 7200 RPM Class SATA 6Gb/s 32MB Cache 3.5 Inch - WD5000AZLX | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Customer Rating | 4.4 out of 5 stars (10480) | 4.4 out of 5 stars (882) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (4603) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (252) |
| Price | $75.99$75.99 | $23.99$23.99 | $23.90$23.90 | $25.88$25.88 |
| Sold By | Amazon.com | Ryze Systems | Zephyr USA | Zephyr USA |
| Cache Memory Installed Size | 16 | 16.00 MB | 16 | 32.00 |
| Digital Storage Capacity | 500 GB | 500.0 GB | 500 GB | 500 GB |
| Hard Disk Rotational Speed | 1 rpm | 7200.0 rpm | 7200 rpm | 7200 rpm |
| Hard Disk Size | 500 | 500.0 GB | 500 GB | 500 GB |
| Hard Disk Form Factor | 3.50 inches | 3.50 inches | 3.50 inches | 3.50 inches |
| Hardware Interface | SATA 6.0 Gb/s | SATA 6.0 Gb/s | SATA 6.0 Gb/s | SATA 6.0 Gb/s |
| Item Dimensions | 5.8 x 4 x 0.8 inches | 0.7 x 4 x 6 inches | 1.03 x 4 x 5.79 inches | 5.8 x 4 x 1 inches |
| Item Weight | 0.91 lbs | 1.60 ounces | 0.99 lbs | 0.99 lbs |
| Size | 500 GB | 500 GB | 500 GB | 500 GB |
From the manufacturer
Desktop Hard Drives Help Lower Costs
The one drive for every desktop system need, supported by 30 years of trusted performance, reliability, and simplicity.
- Store as much desktop data as you need with multiple capacities up to 8TB
- Store data faster with SATA 6Gb/s interface that optimizes burst performance
- Rest easy knowing your drive delivers dependable performance with Seagate AcuTrac servo technology
- Have confidence with safe, fast, and easy drive retirement provided by Instant Secure Erase feature
- Protect your data with Seagate Secure models*
- *Seagate Secure models are not available in all countries. May require TCG-compliant host or controller support.
Computer Hard Drive Storage Technology
- Industry's first 1 TB-per-disk hard drive technology.
- SATA 6Gb/s technology maximizes performance.
- Free DiscWizard software enables high capacities on legacy PC BIOS systems.
Easy Transition Beyond 2TB
Are you worried about moving beyond 2TB? You don't have to. The Seagate DiscWizard utility makes this transition a snap.
- Free software enables Windows machines to utilize drives beyond 2TB.
- Seagate DiscWizard provides you with a means to effectively utilize your high-capacity hard drives.
Help Lower Hard Drive Storage Costs
Seagate Desktop HDDs with 1TB-per-disk have advanced power modes to save more energy while in idle states—without sacrificing performance. Desktop HDDs are produced using the most sophisticated manufacturing process in the industry, with a focus on environmental stewardship.
Desktop HDDs comply with the RoHS directive on hazardous materials and voluntarily restrict halogen compounds. 70% or more of the materials used to build Desktop HDDs are recyclable and have low power consumption.
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| Desktop HDD | Desktop SSHD | NAS HDD | Surveillance HDD | Archive HDD | |
| Ideal for | Everyday desktop computing and storage | Performance desktop, gaming and video editing | High performance data sharing for small business and home office, 1-8 bay NAS system | Enhanced video surveillance system reliability, cost savings and data analytics | Affordable active archiving, perfect for backup and Cloud storage |
| Performance | Mainstream performance | 5x faster than Desktop HDD, more capacity than SSD | Up to 25% faster than other brands | Surveillance-optimized for multi-drive, 24/7 systems | Optimized burst performance |
| Capacity | up to 8TB | up to 4TB | up to 8TB | up to 8TB | up to 8TB |
| Cache | 128 (5-6TB), 65MB (1-4TB), 256MB (8TB | 64MB with 8GB NAND Flash | 64MB | 128MB | 128MB |
| ePower-on Hours | 8x5 | 8x5 | 24x7 | 24x7 | 24x7 |
| Gaming & Video Editing | ✓ | ||||
| DVR & Video Surveillance | ✓ | ||||
| Network Storage, RAID Support, Rotational Vibration Tolerance | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Data Rescue Plan Option | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| Warranty | 2-years | 3-years | 3-years | 3-years | 3-years |
Product guides and documents
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Knowledge Sharing Tech
What's in the box
Product information
| Product Dimensions | 5.8 x 4 x 0.8 inches |
|---|---|
| Item Weight | 14.6 ounces |
| Domestic Shipping | Item can be shipped within U.S. |
| International Shipping | This item can be shipped to select countries outside of the U.S. Learn More |
| ASIN | B005CT56R6 |
| Item model number | ST500DM002 |
| Customer Reviews |
4.4 out of 5 stars |
| Best Sellers Rank | #606 in Internal Hard Drives #8,826 in Computer Internal Components |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | March 8, 2011 |
| Manufacturer | SEAGATE |
| Language | English |
| Country of Origin | Taiwan |
Warranty & Support
Feedback
Product Description
Product Description
By now the world knows that Seagate Barracuda 7200 drives, from the world's premier storage provider, deliver years of reliable service and high performance. The ideal choice for workstations, desktop RAID, gaming PCs, high-end PCs, mainstream PCs and USB/FireWire/eSATA external storage. After years of pioneering research at Seagate, perpendicular recording is now a proven technology. It increases capacity and dependability by storing data vertically, rather than horizontally. And vertically stored data bits mean increased data density which means higher performance to increase productivity. This drive delivers excellent power savings without sacrificing drive or system performance, giving customers the ability to manufacture PC systems and external storage systems that meet energy savings requirements. Seagate hard drives have long been produced with the environment in mind, and not just with low power consumption. With Seagate and the Barracuda drive, our customers can have the best of both worlds, top hard-drive performance and the satisfaction of knowing they are using a high-capacity drive with a very small eco-footprint.
From the Manufacturer
By now the world knows that Seagate Barracuda 7200 drives, from the world's premier storage provider, deliver years of reliable service and high performance. The ideal choice for workstations, desktop RAID, gaming PCs, high-end PCs, mainstream PCs and USB/FireWire/eSATA external storage. After years of pioneering research at Seagate, perpendicular recording is now a proven technology. It increases capacity and dependability by storing data vertically, rather than horizontally. And vertically stored data bits mean increased data density which means higher performance to increase productivity. This drive delivers excellent power savings without sacrificing drive or system performance, giving customers the ability to manufacture eco-friendly PC systems and external storage systems that meet energy savings requirements. Seagate hard drives have long been produced with the environment in mind, and not just with low power consumption. With Seagate and the Barracuda drive, our customers can have the best of both worlds, top hard-drive performance and the satisfaction of knowing they are using a high-capacity drive with a very small eco-footprint.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on January 28, 2020
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Since the last update I have:
1. completely filled the drive with data
2. deleted large, random areas and rewrote to those several times
3. run complete sector scans after each major overwrite operation
4. loaded and used numerous files from random areas with no problems
5. completely wiped the drive using CCleaner (3x overwrite), followed by SeaTools, followed by a complete sector scan
This was rather time consuming, as you can imagine, and it worked the drive pretty hard.
The number of bad sectors remains at 64. There is evidently no significant problem with the heads, if at all, so it's looking like there's a small area of a platter that's defective, which required some use to reveal itself. Hopefully, that's the end of it, though I still find it difficult to fully trust this drive.
** UPDATE 1/23/13:
I installed the drive on the new Windows 8 machine, wiped it and set it up as a single 2.794TB partition (you must initialize the drive as GPT instead of MBR, folks! Link to more info is in comments). There have been no additional bad sectors since #64 weeks ago. However, this is most likely due to the fact that the drive is now squeaky clean. So, the next step is to dump massive amounts of data on it (e.g., batch writing video files to numerous folders) and see if it throws more bad sectors (S.M.A.R.T. reallocation).
** UPDATE 1/6/13:
Sadly, my drive started throwing bad sectors after day 45. Ininitally, there were 36 bad sectors at once that came out of nowhere, and it stayed at 36 for a good while, but it has been dropping sectors at a rate of about 10 every week since then.
By HD Sentinel's calculation (default settings), the drive is now at 36% health. On some boots, HD sentinel shows 6-7% health, with 65k+ sectors being reported as "weak" -- a retest clears this and it returns to the previous health.
From 100% to 36% health in 2 months is cause for concern.
The unit hasn't been touched since installation, and the pc is not a LAN machine, so it doesn't get moved (i.e., shock is not the cause).
Since I needed to build a new pc for another room anyway, I'll install Win8 on the new machine's SSD, install and wipe this Seagate drive and then run a complete/long sector scan on it and see what happens.
I've deducted 2 stars for the alarming bad sector trend and will deduct another star for every 10 additional sectors that go belly up (until I'm down to 1 star, of course). I suspect it won't take long for that to happen.
I'll be back to update the continuing saga...
Original review follows:
________________________
I purchased this drive for use with one of my legacy machines (a 2003 P4 3.0c), as I had finally reached the point where the old Seagate 320GB drive was stuffed full and I ran out of things I could afford to delete. The price/size/performance numbers of this drive are excellent, so I pulled the trigger.
~~ The packaging ~~
Some reviewers mention inadequate packing. I believe this generally is only a problem with 3rd party sellers. I have yet to receive an inadequately/unsafely packaged item which was "sold and shipped by Amazon". I have had problems with dealers who sell through Amazon, however.
Stick to the items Amazon itself stocks and you will likely have less of a problem, especially with fragile items like hard drives.
My drive shipped with form fitted, soft plastic end cups for support and sealed in the factory anti-static bag -- just what you'd expect with an OEM drive. It was double boxed with airbags at one end.
It arrived safely and I've had no functional problems with the drive in the 250 hours I've put on it so far, after having run it through my torture test, which includes a great deal of sustained, heavy defrag operations.
~~ Quiet and cool ~~
The drive is virtually silent when it isn't persistently spinning down for power-saving and parking the heads. I describe how to put an end to this later in the review -- to skip the section on getting the 3TB in Windows XP, look for the "~~ That most annoying head parking, and how to stop it for good ~~" section near the bottom of this review.
Left fully on (no power-saving), my drive temp reads an average 31°C -- I have a fan in front of my HD cage, but I keep the room this pc is in relatively warm, so YMMV greatly here. In comparison, my old Seagate 320GB drive reads an average 37°C.
My old Seagate drive is still going strong (96% health) after 38,092 hours.
I hope this new drive fares as well.
~~ First order of business: scan your drive! ~~
Some people are having problems with >2GB drives in legacy systems.
I'll describe how I freed up the full 3TB in XP in a moment, but the first thing you should do before using ANY new mechanical hard drive is perform complete sector and S.M.A.R.T. scans to make sure you have a 100% healthy drive to begin with.
So, before you partition and format the drive, you should visit Seagate's website support section and download the SeaTools and DiskWizard utilities -- get both Windows and DOS (CD boot) versions of both programs. Burn the CD boot versions to separate CDs.
You may need to change your BIOS settings to boot the CDROM as the first device in order to run these DOS programs.
Verify you have a good drive by using SeaTools DOS S.M.A.R.T. and LONG tests.
You may be able to get Windows version of SeaTools to cooperate, YMMV.
While in SeaTools, you can check the drive information for such things as temperature, power on hours, etc.
I have my doubts as to whether the power on hours will tell you whether the drive is actually an unmarked refurb, since the factory could just reset these specs (firmware wipe) and you'd be none the wiser. At any rate, it's there for the viewing.
The latter test takes a LONG time (whoda thunk it from the name, huh?), but you want to be sure you have a good drive, right? Right! So be patient, it's worth it. After you're confident you have a perfect drive, you can proceed to setting up the drive for your system.
Boot up Windows -- you may need to change your BIOS boot order, YMMV.
~~ The 2TB limit ~~
Seagate's website support section offers plenty of material regarding >2TB with Windows XP, but for those still having trouble, here's how I freed up the full 3TB and cloned my multi-boot 320GB onto this new drive:
1. Go into XP's Administrative Tools>Computer Management>Disk Management and format the unallocated 2TB drive (I chose NTFS). This step is necessary if DiskWizard cloning function in Windows doesn't work for you (as it didn't for me) -- and the DOS version doesn't format in NTFS.
You'll only have access to the first 2TB for now, because XP (32-bit at least) doesn't recognize >2TB. Do not partition this 2TB yet, especially if you want to clone your old drive onto the new drive.
2. Shut down Windows, Boot DiskWizard CD (change BIOS boot order, if necessary) and use the Extended Capacity Manager. This effectively creates a separate hard drive, which will end up showing about 750GB available after formatting. You may be able to use the Windows version of DiskWizard's Extended Capacity Manager, but my XP SP3 didn't cooperate until I had set everything up using the DOS version, YMMV.
3. After confirming you now have a 2TB (≈1.97 available) drive and an ≈750GB drive, you can proceed to clone your old drive (or format the Extended drive if you wish; this won't matter unless you're cloning a >2TB drive). The Windows version of DiskWizard's clone function refused to work for me, YMMV. If it doesn't work for you, you'll need to use the DOS CD bootable version.
I used manual mode because I wanted a larger c:\ multi-boot partition than my old drive had, but you can use automatic (exact copy) mode if you're squeamish about these things.
What you need to remember about cloning is that it duplicates EXACTLY, sector by sector. If your old drive is heavily fragmented (like mine was, due to my lack of diligence) and you don't have enough free space on your old drive to defrag it (like I didn't), your brand new drive will be fragmented in the same way as your old drive (the horror!).
So, I cloned my 320GB onto the largest (2TB) portion of this new drive and defragged the new drive after the fact. Then, not wanting to delete most of my original/backup drive in case something horrible happened to my new drive due to Murphy's Law, I merely cleaned up my old drive enough to give me >15% free space (e.g., I deleted XP) and defragged what was left on it, leaving me with nicely defragged drives.
I know, not ideal, but as I said earlier, I had run out of things I could do without on the old drive and thus could not defrag it prior to cloning, which is something you SHOULD obviously do if you have sufficient free space for the task.
Yes, I could have made tons of backup DVD's to obtain enough free space for defrag operations, but the above method worked, probably about as quickly, and it saved my DVD blanks.
Cloning takes a long time (in my case on this legacy machine it took about 1.5 hours for 320GB), so grab a snack, go watch a movie, etc.
4. Having freed the last TB of your new drive, you can go into Administrative Tools>Computer Management>Disk Management to confirm the drives are all present and you can format this last TB to your liking. The last TB will appear as a separate physical drive. While in Disk Management, you can change the drive letters and names as desired (you cannot change the physical drive NUMBERS in Disk Management).
Performing the above left me with 3 "physical" drives: This new drive with 2 partitions, the original 320GB drive and the last TB of the new drive.
~~ That most annoying head parking, and how to stop it for good ~~
That scraping noise you're hearing is NOT A DEFECT! Please do not send this drive back based on this noise -- doing so only leads to the marketplace being swamped with refurbs because there was nothing wrong with the drives!
The noise is a result of Seagate's power saving design, which spins down the drive to a slower platter speed and parks the heads during periods of inactivity.
A huge problem with this concept is that Windows, at least XP, won't leave the drive alone long enough to make parking viable, as it's accessing the hard drive frequently, even when the user is doing nothing on the pc and all TSR programs are closed! Thus, this parking/scraping noise is very frequent in some cases (average interval was 30 seconds in my case).
This is the only noise I've heard coming from this drive, and it was as bad as if not worse than fingernails on a chalkboard (the horror, part II!). I even resorted to creating a script which would frequently read a bit from the drive in order to keep it constantly active.
If I had not gotten rid of this annoyance, I would have returned a 100% healthy drive for this reason alone. Are you listening, Seagate??
Fortunately, you CAN stop this irritating behavior, at least with certain firmware versions. The drive I was sent was made in Thailand, dated 08/12 with firmware version CC43.
Now, the good stuff (at last).
Download Hard Disk Sentinel (hdsentinel dot com).
In addition to providing you with more info than you ever wanted to know about your drives, the trial version will let you change the APM (Advanced Power Management) setting for this drive (with CC43 firmware at least; YMMV with other versions, but they should also allow it).
Not wanting to completely do away with all power savings, I tinkered for a while and discovered that an APM level of 128 stops the parking/spin down noise. Levels lower than 128 do not stop the noise, they progressively increase the spin down level, which in turn increases the time it takes for the drive to spin up to normal platter speed; you can hear this as you set the level to lower and lower numbers.
Levels higher than 128 also stop the noise, but they result in progressively less power savings.
Imagine that, if only Seagate had shipped this drive at default level 128 instead of the 125 it shipped with, few people would be complaining about this issue!
~~ Final verdict ~~
This is a highly recommendable, virtually silent drive with plenty of storage space and excellent price-size-performance numbers.
Speaking of numbers, compare this drive to the much revered and coveted WD Black:
Seagate 3TB (ST3000DM001): max sustained 210MB/s
WD Black 2TB (WD2002FAEX): max sustained 138MB/s
Seagate 3TB: latency 4.16ms
WD Black 2TB: latency 4.20ms
Seagate 3TB: seek time read <8.5ms, write <9.5ms
WD Black 2TB: seek time ?? (not available, on their website anyway)
Seagate 3TB: 24dB idle, 26dB operating
WD Black 2TB: 29dB idle, 30dB seek mode 3, 34dB performance seek (mode 0)
Seagate 3TB: operating 8W, idle 5.4W, standby & sleep .75W
WD Black 2TB: operating (read/write) 10.7W, idle 8.2W, standby & sleep 1.3W
Reliability/integrity specs are identical. The only thing the WD Black has going for it is its additional 3 years of warranty coverage -- no, that's not a typo; I ran a warranty check on my new Seagate 3TB and it came back as 2 years, not 1.
Better performance with 1TB more storage than the largest WD Black. My previous experience with Seagate, combined with the above comparison sold me again on Seagate.
Seagate just needs to tweak their APM a bit to prevent unnecessary returns and bad feelings about Seagate "green" insistence (yes, I know other manufacturers also use APM). I should deduct a star due to the effort the end user must go to in order to quiet the annoying APM noise, but I feel the above positive aspects make up for this.
ingram_w
Excellent for home Raids/NAS/Server/Other.
Price per value unbeatable at the moment. It is cheap!
Sale price I have seen personally on Amazon ($89/$99/$109) elsewhere I have seen it for $119. All of these are great price per value if you catch the sale.
Detail review:
These drives to not have TLER (built-in time-error recovery). TLER is usually available on enterprise drives which are far more expensive than these model/similar type drives. That said, there is no reason why you should not consider this drive model or any non-enterprise type for any home built system/NAS/Server/Raid setup. I have two custom-built servers; A Raid-5 NAS (Five 2TB Green WD drives) and a backup server where I used twelve of these 3TB seagate drives for my backup server in Raid-6.
Regardless of what other reviews will say, the only reason you should consider enterprise drive is if you really have a business or corporation to have this extra layer of redundancy in place or if you have the money for these type of drives. But if you are trying to save a buck and are on the ledge of if I should buy an enterprise drive or not? ... go for the non-enterprise-drives. For home usage, non-enterprise drives will work just as well with the same performance. Don't read into the hype you need raid specific drives. Unless you are a DBA managing tons of data you do not need it. Yes, drives do fail but no less than an enterprise drive.
I got twelve of these drives from Amazon for the price of $99.00/$109.00. The drives went down to $89.00 during the lightening sale but I missed out on that. The price/value is worth it... so shop around when there is a sale. At the time, Amazon limited one drive sale per account. I called in some favors from a few friends to order the drive for me as a gift. If needed, I can return the item in the case of DOA. This is the best way to take advantage of the one item per account bind limitation sale.
All drives of all brands has the potential to fail or DOA regardless of where they are made. Anyone says different have no idea what they are talking about. These are sensitive hardware with precision moving parts... you would be surprised how items are bounced around during shipments. You really can't blame all DOA's on shipping but its something to take into consideration. There is also user fault for failed drives as well as many other viable reasons. Of the 40+ drives I have ordered across 2 decades from multiple brands I never had one failed. Does this means or verify anything? No! but maybe people should not get too worked up about failed drives. RMA the drives for a free replacement in most cases. You must not have done something correctly if you cannot RMA for a replacement drive. Annoyed that you have to RMA a drive because it was DOA or failed? ....Knowing the nature of drives or any equipment for that matter there is the potential it can be DOA ...and if the thought never came up that the item could be DOA/defective? you are delusional and should not pretend you know what you are talking about.
These drives and my other branded drives are working 24/7 without breaking a sweat. The random reads and write speeds are 112MB/sec for Raid 6. This is without any sort of tweaking... just a straight raid-6 setup without any SSD cache. For the raid 5 setup I am using software raid. For the 12-drive array I am using an Adaptec 16-port raid controller. Some tweaking it will be easy to bump up the random reads and writes.
For those that complain they are seeing less space on drives when installed: All drives will have less usable space than advertised. For example, without going into too much detail a 3TB once installed will grant you just over 2.7 TB of usable space. Also be sure your Mobo can support/see larger drives over 2TB.
Top reviews from other countries
Rather annoyingly, both HDDs worked long enough to transfer data to them but then died within the first few hours of use. Neither could then be recognised by my computer, and I think they may well have stopped spinning altogether. Having received two faulty drives in a row, I checked the Seagate warranty on the latest HDD supplied and was shocked to find that it had expired in June 2016, meaning that it is probably 2014 stock.
In summary, I recommend you spend a bit more money on your new HDDs and buy them elsewhere. These ones are old and unreliable.
The seller packaged them very well with plenty of padding so they arrived in perfect condition.
Quite simply: no problems. I've never had trouble with any Seagate ITB HDDs, in fact any new Seagate HDD I've owned and so far that continues to be true.
Although the two Seagate HDDs received are as listed they're slightly different in design from the accompanying listing photos. The label in particular is a different colour and specifies it as a recently manufactured AF (Advanced Format) type. It should be good for any purposes a HDD might be required for.
However one of the things I've had trouble with using another make of HDD, a WD, also specified as an AF type, is for cloning an existing Windows OS on an older HDD. It is a bit of mystery exactly why that is happening but it seems to be to do with the external USB enclosure I was using. There's some sort of USB incompatibility as the problem is resolved if you connect it up internally via SATA.
I must make it clear this is only when it comes to this particular cloning task and is probably very niche.
Anyway the point is I've not yet tried the Seagate AF ones for this purpose. So if that is what you are going to use them I can not confirm whether or not they're suitable. They work fine in an USB external housing for backup, storage or whatever. That I can confirm because it is what I've been doing with the one I've been using most.
As I simply needed a few cheap drives for some projects this is fairly inconsequential to me, but if you have a specific requirement then what you receive may not be suitable. Based upon my experiences, what you are actually buying is the hard drive equivalent of a British 'Lucky Bag' or Japanese 'Fukubukuro'.
I'll precurse this by stating that my order was fulfilled by Eureka! Ltd.
The issue here was that I ordered a brand new drive and instead received a refurbished one. Even if it had worked as well as my other drives of the same type, it would be returned on principle. There's logic to this too, for those who aren't as stubborn as myself: since the drive has been used before (evident since it has been refurbished), it's lifespan would be decreased; and to top it off, when tested, the drive had a notable amount of sectors reallocated and consequently did not align with the advertised capacity.
FYI, I ordered the Seagate Barracuda, 1TB.
Item is being returned at no cost; which is now the most positive thing to come out of ordering from Eureka! Ltd. Will update with more info, should anything worth noting come out of this.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 31, 2016
I'll precurse this by stating that my order was fulfilled by Eureka! Ltd.
The issue here was that I ordered a brand new drive and instead received a refurbished one. Even if it had worked as well as my other drives of the same type, it would be returned on principle. There's logic to this too, for those who aren't as stubborn as myself: since the drive has been used before (evident since it has been refurbished), it's lifespan would be decreased; and to top it off, when tested, the drive had a notable amount of sectors reallocated and consequently did not align with the advertised capacity.
FYI, I ordered the Seagate Barracuda, 1TB.
Item is being returned at no cost; which is now the most positive thing to come out of ordering from Eureka! Ltd. Will update with more info, should anything worth noting come out of this.


























