I'm looking for 1TB or more to put into enclosures. Been reading reviews and every manufacturer seems to have it's fair share of problem models. I usually trust names like Seagate, or Hitachi. I don't mind paying for the quality and reliability. What do you guys think?
Western Digital Greenpower or Seagate Barracuda. The former use less power and run much quieter and seemingly cooler as well, so are less likely to fail in an external-box environment. I'd go with the WDs personally.
No, but not all external enclosures are equal, some let drives get quite hot, and Seagates get very hot indeed, and are also much noisier.
Alright thanks again...but can I keep buggin ya for some opinions? What are some good enclosures you can recomend? Since you mentioned heat, should I be looking at ones with built in fans? Is an aluminum case perferable over everything else? Basically, if you can suggest some features I should look for or stay away from? Better yet, is there a buyers guide for these things that I've missed here? I did a search, but didn't find much, not even many threads talking about this.
I like the IcyBox IB-351 enclosure. Generally avoid anything without vents and/or fans, and avoid anything that looks cheap, because odds are good it'll break.
For external drives, the WD Mybooks get unbearably hot as well. You don't feel it from the outside but after being on for a couple hours, if you were to open the case and take out the drive you would literally need to let it cool before you could touch it. I know from my 500GB WD Mybook. The WDMybooks are also painfully slow at write.
I wouldn't let a WD MyBook thingy near my machines personally, but i do rate WD drives highly. Here's the hard drive enclosures i use - http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_jump.cfm/570836/3453526 I've got 5 in regular use with 3 to be unboxed when i can afford 3 more drives to add to them.
What is a budget enclosure you suggest for a 500GB WD Mybook drive? The only reason I bought that drive is because it was $60.
That doesn't come with a fan tho...I woulda thought you guys would all have ones with fan's since that seems to be the most reliable route???
The IB-351s use vents, they actually cool drives just as well as the cheaper fanned enclosures, without the noise.
Hey Creaky, any place to purchase those other than e-bay? Who manufactures them? Does the fan come on automatically, or do you have to manually turn it on/off or leave it on all the time? Also says they only support IDE....which brings me to my next question....in terms of internal drive in enclosures, what's the performance/reliability with IDE vs. SATA?
IDE - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Allcam-Enclosure-Aluminium-Controls-Silver/dp/B000RAFFEY SATA - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Allcam-Enclosure-External-Aluminium-OneTouck/dp/B000V8KQE6 See the pics, there's a power switch and a switch for the fan. (And pretty lights aplently). I've only ever used one E-SATA enclosure, it's a pain in the behind. So much for the hotplugging that E-SATA is supposed to offer, mine always required a reboot before it would 'see' the drive. So i bought an E-SATA to SATA converter cable, then i was able to mount the drive internally and connect it to the E-SATA connector (i had one drive bay free internally but no free SATA connectors). Problem solved, drive works perfectly now. I don't leave enclosures on for long, mine are all backups of internal drives so they're only on long enough to make changes/add new files etc. But they're totally reliable and fairly quiet. USB2.0 is plenty fast enough for me, i think USB2.0 is rated at something like 480Mb/s, SATA-II is rated at 3GB/s. I've never bothered to check what SATA-II rated speeds relate to in actual MB/s speeds, suffice it to say they're very fast indeed, but as i say i'm happy enough with USB 2.0 speeds, USB2.0 is quick enough for video streaming, for instance.
I liked using external S-ATA, not to be confused with e-SATA, this method was using an internal S-ATA cable outside a case. Hotplugged perfectly fine, data speeds at 70MB/s rather than 30 that USB offers. Other than for copying large files though, you don't get any other benefits, and USB is much more widespread. With an external drive there's no real reason to have S-ATA over IDE, but you can get bigger drives using S-ATA, and possibly cheaper ones too.
Yeah i routed my cable from the E-SATA port to the inside and it works perfectly; i will have to chuck the SATA enclosure on eBay and i won't buy any more in future.
Just a side question since you guys seem to know your stuff; what is the maximum size XP can handle, either internal or external? Is 1tb ok? Thanks