Anyone have any suggestions for rugged external hard drives? I'm looking for a 1TB drive, firewire is a must. It's gotta stand up to constant travel and usage. Any suggestions?
Evan
Evan
I knew the lacie drives would be the first recommended. I've killed 2 of them now, so I'm looking to try a new brand...
Evan
The drive itself just doesn't seem to last. Both have developed the clicks and are completely unreadable...
Evan
That's got nothing to do with the enclosure and everything to do with abuse. You can just pop a new drive into your existing enclosure and it will be fine, till you drop it again. I highly recommend Hitachi drives for reliability, since they bought IBM's server hard drive division and those were some of the best drives made.
<big wide grin>
First low frequency drivers, now hard-drives... God help us when you start destroying consoles !
Andrew
My day job is in IT, and part of my responsibility is overseeing all my company's desktops and laptops. I have replaced failed drives from absolutely every manufacturer - IBM, Toshiba, Samsung, Hitachi, Seagate, WD, etc. As a company, we made the move to SSDs about 2 years ago, both for performance reasons, and also because rebuilding dead laptops was taking a big chunk of my time. I've replaced one dead SSD, but other than that, there has been a huge reliability improvement from moving to SSDs, and for corporate use an 80 or 128GB drive is perfectly adequate.That's got nothing to do with the enclosure and everything to do with abuse. You can just pop a new drive into your existing enclosure and it will be fine, till you drop it again. I highly recommend Hitachi drives for reliability, since they bought IBM's server hard drive division and those were some of the best drives made.
I thought he already has? Evan, aren't you on like your 5th SC48? :lol:
I don't believe the linkage between IBM's server drive technology and their workstation drive technology is as strong as you make it out to be - there are major differences between a 100% duty cycle server/SAN drive and a much lower duty cycle workstation drive.
I believe Seagate and Hitachi are as good as anyone else, but the only way to keep important data on hard drives is to have multiple copies. As you suggest, the expected service life of any particular drive is closely related to how it has lived, and is IMO much less closely related to what brand it is.
That's got nothing to do with the enclosure and everything to do with abuse. You can just pop a new drive into your existing enclosure and it will be fine, till you drop it again. I highly recommend Hitachi drives for reliability, since they bought IBM's server hard drive division and those were some of the best drives made.
I thought he already has? Evan, aren't you on like your 5th SC48? :lol:
The Lacie enclosures are pretty good, but the drives inside suck. They likely would have failed even if you just had them sitting on a desk and not traveling. Get a good pair of laptop sized drives and stick it in the lacie enclosures you have (you DO still have them right?) and have a main and a backup. Hitachi and seagate seem to be the most reliable, in that order. If you are multitracking then remember to get at least 7200 rpm drives.
I second the idea of some SSDs. Evan, my guess is that your failure problems are probably mechanical and that an SSD, having no moving parts, will fix this.