#14
Post
by wallybear » Fri Oct 27, 2006 6:36 pm
I was comparing one Hitachi drive to another, not to a Seagate. The only experience I have with the Seagate is that I have heard it running in my friend's T60 and it's definitely louder than the Hitachi.
The new 7200rpm Hitachi I bought is only "slightly" louder than the 5400rpm drive that shipped in my T60. In my opinion, they are both within the realm of "nearly silent" (while the Seagate is in the realm of "noticable noise").
As for the price comparison I gave, I was comparing these drives (all Hitachi) purchased from Newegg about a month ago (some of these drives are not available from Newegg today or have dropped in price):
5400rpm 80GB (like shipped in my machine) cost $75 to replace.
5400rpm 100GB cost $100.
5400rpm 120GB cost $130.
5400rpm 160GB (new head technology) cost $170.
7200rpm 80GB cost $125.
7200rpm 100GB cost $175.
I chose the 7200rpm 80GB to "replace" my original 5400rpm 80GB drive because the extra $50 for the speed increase was worth the cost to me. I didn't choose the faster 100GB drive because it wasn't worth $50 more for the extra 18 or so GB. I put the original 80GB in a SATA HDD adapter that can fit either in the Ultrabay or the Advanced Dock's bay. I just installed Vista using Virtual PC 2007 (beta) with the Virtual HD on the slower 80GB drive. All in all, very impressive. I'm going to install Vista for real (not using the emulating software) tonight on the 5400rpm drive. But that's another story....
In terms of speed increase, the 7200rpm drive makes the machine "noticably" faster which means I can tell the difference. But, on the other hand, the 5400 is no slouch. I suppose an investment in a defragmenter like PerfectDisk8 (which I use) is wise no matter what speed, or size, your hard drive is.
By the way, I keep most of my data (docs, music, jpegs, etc.) on my outboard Maxtor 300GB (7200rpm) connected either by USB2 or Firewire. The Firewire interface (using a Cardbus PC card) is, again, noticably faster than than the USB2 interface. But in comparison to another outboard drive I use (a 45GB Western Digital that runs at 5400rpm) the Maxtor drive is very fast.
I hope this information helps somebody. If so, please let me know.
x100e (3508-CTO) 1.6 L625, 4GB RAM, 320GB 7200rpm HDD, Windows 7 Pro x64.
T400 (2764-CTO) 2.53 Core 2 Duo, 4GB RAM, 500GB 7200rpm HDD, 2GB Intel Turbo Memory, LED high-resolution LCD, Windows 7 Pro x64.
T60 (2623-D6U) 1.83 Core Duo, 3GB RAM, 80GB 5400rpm HDD, Windows 7 Pro x86.