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Legal Stuff

 

   

Application:

Enterprise Storage

Provided by:

Seagate

Available at:

NewEgg.com

MSRP:

$534.99

Availability:

Now

Review by:

Darren

Edited by:

Scott

Review date:

May 17th, 2006

 

Crucial System Scanner
 

 

     The Seagate Barracuda has long been at the forefront of hard drive performance and reliability.  With the 7200.10 series, Seagate takes things a step further;  first with groundbreaking 500 GB drives and now with the worlds first 750 GB capacity hard drive.  With nearly a Terabyte of storage at your disposal, what will you do with all that space?  Well here at the club, we'll take two!

     There is nothing particularly sexy about a Seagate Barracuda drive.  No fancy lights or see through windows.  Still just holding almost a Terabyte and a half's worth of storage is some what akin to buying that first Gig of RAM. Awesome.

     Seagate isn't just talking a good game, they are backing it up with an industry leading 5-year warranty.  The 7200.10 Barracuda  family runs from 200GB to 750GB insuring there is a drive to meet your storage needs and budget.  The .10 suffix indicates this is the tenth generation Barracuda resulting from ten years of research.

Lets put all that space into perspective with a little help from Wikipedia:

Terabytes in use

  • The U.S. Library of Congress has claimed it contains approximately 20 terabytes of text.
  • The shipping company UPS has approximately 474 terabytes of information in its databases.
  • 18 minutes of UHDV consumes 3.5 terabytes of data.
  • Personal computers and related devices such as TiVos containing a terabyte or more of storage space have recently become practical using combinations of high-capacity mass-market hard drives. As of November 2005, common commercial hard drives exceeded 500 gigabytes in size, so storage capacity totalling a terabyte or more can be reached using as few as 2 to 3 hard disks, at a street cost of as little as USD $450, down from over USD $1000 in 2003. (source: www.newegg.com)

     By now everyone should be somewhat familiar with Serial ATA. The Seagate Barracuda is using SATA II combined with NCQ (Native Command Queuing) to provide up to 300 Mbytes/s transfer rates.  NCQ allows multiple commands to be outstanding in the drive at the same time.  The result is the ability to have the drive dynamically reschedule or reorder operations to increase drive efficiency.  Combine that with the 16 MB onboard cache and your new high capacity drive is performing just like a respectable high performance drive.

7200.10 Family Features:

  • Highest capacity in a single drive - up to 750 GB of digital storage space
  • The first 3.5" drive to support Vertically stored data bits, enabling industry leading capacity in existing standard form factors
  • A range of options from 8 or 16 MB cache to interface choices of ATA/100, SATA 1.5Gb/s or SATA 3Gb/s to meet your specific needs
  • Seagate SoftSonic motor enables whisper quiet operation
  • Enhanced G-Force Protection defends against handling damage
  • Unprecedented 5-Year warranty
  • Family capacity from 200GB to 750 GB
  • Maximum sustained data transfer rate: 78 Mb/s
  • Operating shock: 68 Gs

Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750 GB Specifications:

Model

Brand Seagate
Series Barracuda 7200.10
Model ST3750640AS

Performance

Capacity 750GB
Cache 16MB
RPM 7200 RPM
Average Seek Time 11ms
Average Latency 4.16ms
Interface SATA 3.0Gb/s NCQ

Physical Spec

Form Factor

3.5"

Features

  SATA 3Gb/s with NCQ
  2.7 bels idle, 3.0 bels seek acoustics
  68 Gs operating shock
  300 Gs non-operating shock

Warranty

Manufacturer Warranty

5 Years

     The actual Barracuda white paper is a laundry list of boring stats.  For the brave you can access it here.  The rest of us are headed off to test these bad boys.

 

 


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