Need a new external drive, any ideas?

Need some help in deciding what external drive I should get. I currently have a 500 GB SATA drive in an external USB case and a 250 GB Western Digital passport. I have lots of music, pictures and video files and am looking to put them all in a central storage location where I can access all of them thru my network but still keep it portable.

Here are some of the options I am looking at, I'm just not sure which to chose.

Seagate Freeagent - Enough space, great price but read it has a power issue by many buyers.

Western Digital My Book
- Also lot's of space plus extra connections, price is not bad would like more space but will cost a lot more.

Maxtor OneTouch
- Lot's of space and a great price, would like more space but cant find anything bigger at the moment. Don't know much about Maxtor external drives so please any personal reviews would be great.

Keep in mind, the links are not necessarily where I will purchase these products. I also wonder if it would be better and cheaper if I simply got an internal drive to match the 500 GB I currently have (maybe a 1TB) and a new external case to accommodate both drives.

Any information will be greatly appreciated.
69,118 views 32 replies
Reply #1 Top

I use Mybooks.. never had a single issue, been using for over a year.

Reply #2 Top

I have a 500 gb Freeagent - it's a POS, overheats within minutes, ventilation is on the bottom.....geniuses at Seagate don't know that heat rises. It's in a drawer.....

I have 2 MyBooks (500gb) and 2 Maxtors (200gb & 100gb) and a 400gb Passport

The Maxtors are older (aluminum cases) but work great. I use them mainly for photography storage.

The MyBooks are newer (one I got in December) but they work great also. They are strictly for backups.

The Passport I keep with my laptop and it contains duplicates of my music & photos as well as backups of downloaded installation programs I've bought or collected.

 

Recommendation is MyBook using esata but not if portability is important. While they are external, they are really not meant to be lugged around.....for that you need a 2.5" like the Passport

or

instead of a new external case just get a hot swap box on esata like this Newegg

Reply #3 Top

If cost is not an object - I would go with a san setup.  I used to have lots of external drives from all makers and models but I noticed that I was replacing these drives a lot.

I purchased a couple of Drobo's last year and I could not be happier.  

For the Cost of the case, you can add drives of any speed and brand as you choose to grow the system.  You also don't have to worry about losing data in the long run.  Check it out.  

Reply #4 Top

Quoting Lantec, reply 2
I have a 500 gb Freeagent - it's a POS, overheats within minutes, ventilation is on the bottom.....geniuses at Seagate don't know that heat rises. It's in a drawer.....

How much do you want for the Freeagent? I always wanted somthing like that :grin:

Reply #5 Top

Maxtor or Western Digital....Huge and cheap. You aren't talking Laptop/portability, are you? If the latter, I'd opt for a small Western Digital or Maxtor One Touch...and keep the large/small ones same brand for driver update ease.

Back to the snow shoveling.

:sun:

Reply #6 Top

Thanks for all the great advice. When I said portable, I meant being able to move it around if necessary but not portable like my WD passport. I just don't want hard drives inside a PC.

I will probably go with the My Book, I would like the network version but seems a bit expensive for me.

The Drobo is the coolest storage concept I have ever seen but a bit outof my price league for now. I will however consider it for future replacements.

BTW, what does POS mean?

Reply #7 Top

I always buy Iomega with Firewire connection.

I have only good experiences with Iomega, and they look nice. Firewire is a lot faster than USB 2. On paper the speed is roughly the same, but in reality Firewire appears not to block the CPU like USB does.

All my external hard disks have Firewire and USB 2 connectors.

 

Reply #10 Top

Firewire 800 is faster than USB, but is usually found on MAC's 

Firewire 400 isn't. ESATA blows them all away. Newer PC's include ESATA or you can get an ESATA card pretty cheap.

 

USB runs about 480Mbps (bits per sec not bytes) that would be 60MB/s actual rates will drop depending on load on the USB hub

Firewire 400 is 400Mbps, that would be 50MB/s doesn't have the hub loading problem that USB does so it probably "seems" faster.

ESATA runs at 300MB/s (that's 2,400Mbps)

Reply #12 Top

Firewire 800 is faster than USB, but is usually found on MAC's 

I always wondered: where does the term "MAC's" come from?

 

Firewire 400 isn't. ESATA blows them all away. Newer PC's include ESATA or you can get an ESATA card pretty cheap.

I use the same disks with Firewire 400 and occasionally USB 2. Firewire 400 is definitely faster.

 

Reply #13 Top

I always wondered: where does the term "MAC's" come from?

MacIntosh http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Macintosh_computers

that's where it comes from ....I use it to refer to anything Apple

 

I use the same disks with Firewire 400 and occasionally USB 2. Firewire 400 is definitely faster.

It's likely your USB hub has more than one connection. Firewire is faster on my system too.

Reply #14 Top

I forgot to mention, while all these other connects are faster, I will be depending on USB because I plan on using this drive to watch movies on my TV, am considering that Western Digital TV HD Media Player to go with it.

BTW, a question. Is it possible to have a hard drive connected thru both a usb and an ethernet at the same time? Just wondering.

Reply #15 Top

MacIntosh http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Macintosh_computers

that's where it comes from ....I use it to refer to anything Apple

Yes, but why the acronym "MAC"?

 

It's likely your USB hub has more than one connection. Firewire is faster on my system too.

Same for direct connections (I don't use a hub for disks).

 

Reply #16 Top

MAC has to do with networking, while Mac refers to the Macintosh. Every Ethernet Adapter has an MAC, which is the adapter's address aka identifier.

Drive wise, I would build my own, after careful consideration of hdds and cases for them.

Reply #17 Top

I like Western Digital. Never had a problem with them.

Reply #18 Top

MAC = Machine Address Code

Mac = Apple Macintosh

It's all a question of caps ;p

Reply #19 Top

MAC = Machine Address Code

Mac = Apple Macintosh

It's all a question of caps

Look at that, i ask about drives and learn about MACs and Macs. that why I love this site.

Reply #20 Top

MAC = Machine Address Code

Mac = Apple Macintosh

It's all a question of caps

Look at that, i ask about drives and learn about MACs and Macs. that why I love this site.

Reply #21 Top

I need to get an external hard drive also....wish they were free!!

Reply #22 Top

I need to get an external hard drive also....wish they were free!!

there's always the 5 finger discount, the grandmother discount and the can I borrow this" but never give it back discount.

Reply #23 Top

Quoting CharlesCS, reply 22

I need to get an external hard drive also....wish they were free!!
there's always the 5 finger discount, the grandmother discount and the can I borrow this" but never give it back discount.

lol :rofl:

Reply #24 Top

I just got two Western Digital 1 TB My Book drives, one the Essential Edition (USB only, write transfer rate about 25.8 GB/s) the other a Home Edition (eSATA, write transfer rate about 48.4 GB/s). I use them both strictly for backups and the drives are always on.

These things run HOT (case is passively cooled, no fans), often going up to 48º C (with 19/20º C ambient) just sitting there idle! With temperatures like these, it's no wonder My Books are getting a bad rep: the drives and interface electronics must simply fry during Summer.

I solved the excessive temperature problem by purchasing a relatively cheap Nox Sirocco notebook cooler with 3 fans: placed the two My Books on top and tapped shut the grill holes around them, forcing the cold air propelled by the fans to exit via the hard drive enclosures. Result: both My Books now run at 28º C, which is even lower than the temperatures of some of my internal hard drives. |-)  

Also, if you choose eSATA, be warned that these drives do NOT include an eSATA cable, you will have to purchase one separately. Furthermore, with some cables the metal part of the connector is too short and seems to plug into the drive, but isn't really making full contact. This is a common problem, and if it happens to you and the drive is not recognized by Windows, cut 3-4 mm of the plastic around the cable's connector to expose a bit more metal - that worked for me.

Another common issue, at least in eSATA mode, is that these drives are hard-coded to sleep after being idle for 10 minutes. Unfortunately they then take too long to spin up and end up being hard dismounted by Windows (i.e. they disappear from My Computer). Only way to get them back is by rebooting the system. I solved this issue by making a small applet that copies - then deletes - itself to the drive every 5 minutes, thus reseting the idle timer and preventing the drive from automatically spinning down.

Reply #25 Top

I solved this issue by making a small applet that copies - then deletes - itself to the drive every 5 minutes, thus reseting the idle timer and preventing the drive from automatically spinning down.

Wow, that seems like too much hassle. No eSATA for me.