[DEAD]Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 ST31000340AS 1TB SATA 7200 RPM 32MB Hard Drive

Pardus

Diamond Member
Jun 29, 2000
8,197
21
81
SEAGATE Barracuda 7200.11 ST31000340AS 1TB SATA 7200 RPM 32MB Hard Drive Bulk

Price: $99.99. Free ship.

General
Packaging Bulk

Specification
Capacity 1TB
Interface SATA
Rotation speed 7200 RPM
Buffer size 32MB
Form factor 3.5"
Avg Latency 4.16 ms
 

aceO07

Diamond Member
Nov 6, 2000
4,491
0
76
I just noticed it on ZZF a few minutes before I saw this post. It seems like a good deal. Newegg charges $129 for the same drive.
 

Nessism

Golden Member
Dec 2, 1999
1,619
1
81
Ordered one of these drives a few weeks ago from Dell. Dang thing made all kinds of abnormal clicking noises so I sent it back for RMA ? received a refurb drive in return. I?m normally a big Seagate fan but can?t help but think that their quality is slipping, or maybe they have issues with their larger drives. At any rate, hope the folks jumping on this nice price have better luck than me.
 

WolverineGator

Golden Member
Mar 20, 2001
1,011
0
0
The Barracuda 7200.11 offers the best low-level benchmark results, jumping over 100 MB/s read or write transfer rates and accessing data in an average of 12.7 ms. With the exception of access time and I/O benchmarks, it also clearly beats Western Digital's 10,000 RPM Raptor, and sets the new standard for desktop hard drives.

http://www.tomshardware.com/re...yte-battle,1717-3.html
 

rugby

Senior member
Oct 11, 2001
437
0
0
I've ordered 3 dozen of various 7200.11 (mostly 500GB and 1TB drives) and have seen a failure rate of near 60% in the past 6 months. Drives were purchased from different vendors and even used in different machines (some in raid enclosures). I've never seen this type of failure before from a manufacturer. I no longer buy Seagate drives because of this, I've switched over to Hitachi for our main raid arrays and haven't had a single problem.

I had to explain to a client that 4 drives failed in their raid 6 array and we had to restore from backup nearly 3 TB of data which is NOT fast.
 

Old Hippie

Diamond Member
Oct 8, 2005
6,361
1
0
Originally posted by: rugby
I've ordered 3 dozen of various 7200.11 (mostly 500GB and 1TB drives) and have seen a failure rate of near 60% in the past 6 months. Drives were purchased from different vendors and even used in different machines (some in raid enclosures). I've never seen this type of failure before from a manufacturer. I no longer buy Seagate drives because of this, I've switched over to Hitachi for our main raid arrays and haven't had a single problem.

I had to explain to a client that 4 drives failed in their raid 6 array and we had to restore from backup nearly 3 TB of data which is NOT fast.

I saw something related to this problem today........
<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.dailytech.com/Report+Kingston+to+Sell+Intel+SSDs/article13120.htm">I used to work for Maxtor, and right now for SanDisk. So I think I can tell you how the qualification of HD and SSD usually work:
For OEM like DELL and HP, they have a spec on write pattern, temperature, sample size, and all sorts of stuff. Basically they ask you to ship them 1000-5000 evaluation samples for a new design (when you change heads/platters/coating/chips/controllers/etc), and they randomly pick 1000 out of the 5000, and run the torture test. It has to fail less than 0.5% of the sample size, or else they reject your design.

What happens when you are rejected? Your 10 million drives per month order is now divided among your 3 other competitors and your stock drop 30-80%. http://Seagate is in trouble right now because they have design problem in 7200.11, Maxtor and IBM went into similar problems and never recover completely from it.</"> Samsung is now pretty much the only game in SSD because they pass all the spec, one of our competitor (can't say who) got dropped because their memory failed. They then decided to buy Samsung's memory and passed the spec, but still fail some other test later and was dropped by DELL.

What happens to those drives/designs that failed? Bestbuy and Circuit City, they are still good enough for most users, but for a large OEM, a 0.5% extra failure rate means losing millions on profit. Retail customers will be happy if you send them a new drive with a size upgrade, or refund their purchase. </a>

I thought it was pretty interesting....
 
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