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Seagate Barracuda IV 80Gb Hard Disk
Need somewhere to store all those MP3s? Iain
Laskey gives the Barracuda IV a whirl
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Info |
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Product: |
Barracuda IV |
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From: |
Seagate |
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Web: |
www.seagate.com
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Price: |
£105 |
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Rating: |
9/10 |
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We like: |
Fast, quiet, large
capacity |
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We don’t like: |
Nothing |
I fondly remember my first hard disk. It came in a
huge external SCSI casing that sat on a shelf above an Atari ST and
provided 48Mb (yes, Megabytes) of storage for the bargain price of
£550. Was I happy! Better yet, it romped along at a phenomenal
300k/bytes per second.
Installation
I bought the Barracuda online for £105 which gets
you the basic drive in a box. No leads, no screws, no software for
systems that can’t cope with bigger hard disks. At this price
though, who is quibbling? Seagate’s retail boxed drives come with
Disk Wizard software which allows older PCs and operating systems to
work with 80Gb drives properly. If you feel your PC might need the
Disk Wizard software you’ll have to pay a little more for a retail
version or visit
http://www.seagate.com/support/disc/drivers/discwiz.html
to download the software and other Seagate tools.
Like all hard drives, installation is fairly
straightforward. Motherboards generally have two IDE connectors
onboard and each of these can take a cable with two connectors
totalling a maximum of four IDE devices. IDE devices have to be set
to master or slave via a small jumper with each cable having one of
each attached. If you only have one device, it must be set to
master.
Having set the drive, it is merely a case of finding
a suitable place for it to go. You should have a ‘drive cage’ in
your case with pre drilled holes that line up with the holes down
either side of the drive, two each side. Slide in the drive and
screw it in place. If you can, try to leave a gap around the drive
for airflow to help keep it cool. Most drives have the electronics
exposed on one side but the Barracuda IV has a metal plate
protecting this area which makes it much easier to handle when
installing.
With the drive in place, plug in the IDE cables and
power cables to finish things off. If you get stuck, Seagate provide
installation manuals online with the Barracuda IV’s being at
http://www.seagate.com/support/disc/iguides/ata/snowmassig100129216.pdf
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As I was using the drive on a fairly new Windows XP
based PC, it worked fine with the drive just as it was. All I needed
to do was to format it as NTFS and it was ready to go.
In use
The Barracuda IV is an ATA/100 drive and as such
isn’t the quickest on the block with some ATA/133 drives starting to
appear. However it does sport a 7200RPM spin speed and a 2Mb cache
which helps enormously in the speed stakes. There are marginally
quicker drives out there but this one is still at the top of the
heap.
Another key feature is the low noise levels produced
by this drive. Seagate have tried very hard to reduce the background
noise generated by the Barracuda IV and given that it is a 7200RPM
unit, it is indeed extraordinarily quiet. It would be ideal in a
RAID set up as two or more of these would barely be noticeable
unlike some of its peers.
The drive also runs fairly cool. Many fast drives
can suffer from heat dissipation problems but even after being on
24/7 for some days, I found the drive temperature to be quite
reasonable. As long as your case is properly ventilated, you’ll have
no problems here.
Whilst this is a difficult thing to test for,
Seagate claim enhanced reliability via their 3D Defence System which
includes Drive Defence, Data Defence and Diagnostic Defence. It also
includes S.M.A.R.T drive monitoring and reporting for systems that
can make use of this useful failure warning system. Between all
these it is claimed the drive has enhanced protection against
physical handling, drops and internal failures. If you move your PC
about a lot, this can be an important feature.
Conclusion
Seagate is to be congratulated on a fine drive.
It is fast, big, cheap, almost silent and with a 3 year warranty and
600,000 hour MTBF (Mean Time Between Failure) you can be confident
it won’t let you down. Highly recommended.
Iain Laskey
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