Zap
Elite Member
- Oct 13, 1999
- 22,377
- 2
- 81
Originally posted by: Sheninat0r
The MSRP is supposed to be around $300... fun, no?
Not bad. Costs less than two Raptor 150 drives for the same capacity.
Originally posted by: Dashel
It's nice for an enthusiast with money to spare though.
Sure is. I'd take this over, say, current DDR3 boards/RAM. IMO there's a better chance of this being more noticeable than DDR3 in real-world performance. Note that I'm just picking DDR3 at random, so you can insert any other more-expensive-but-barely-better computer part here.
Originally posted by: Quiksilver
Bah, give me cheap high capacity solid state drives.
Your wish will be granted... in 4-8 years.
Originally posted by: IsLNdbOi
So could we take it out of that fancy heatsink and use it in a laptop?
Sure you can, however it was already stated somewhere that WD will void your 5 year warranty if it is removed from the IcePack?. It certainly looks as if it is completely standard in comparison to 2.5" notebook SATA drives and 2.5" SAS drives (minus the interface). Oh yeah, another thing too is that it is too thick to fit inside most notebook HDD bays. Most notebook drives are 9.5mm thick, while some are 12.5mm thick. The VelociRaptor is 15mm thick, which is the standard height for enterprise 2.5" HDDs.
I certainly can envision some high-end notebook makers using this drive. Heck, if they can squeeze SLI into a 17"-20" luggable form factor, adding a couple mm to the drive bay is child's play.