Is there any diffence in the new Black fancy looking 150 gb raptor and the regular 150 gb raptor other than the looks? I have a chance to get one now and the original is 275 with the cable bundle, the black newer one is $325
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Is there any diffence in the new Black fancy looking 150 gb raptor and the regular 150 gb raptor other than the looks? I have a chance to get one now and the original is 275 with the cable bundle, the black newer one is $325
As far as I know older raptors only came in 37 & 75GB.
Anyway the new HD is native SATA while older vertions used bridged chip.
Xbitlabs.com did a story about it a few weeks ago.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RavenLord
No I was talking about the newer 150 GB ones, there is one that sells for 270 ish... and a newer one, same storage space, but a fancier design, I wanted to make sure the newer one with the fancier design didnt have any performance gains. Other wise I would pay the extra 50 bucks!
There's no performance difference.
theres a review on newegg that says this... dunno if its true or not
Quote:
Pros: Specs and online reviews are great. I haven't actually received the drive yet so I can't comment on the performance yet, but I would like to share some info....
Cons: Pricey, unnecessary window.... More ยป
Other Thoughts: The window is NOT the only difference between this and the cheaper ADFD version. This one (AHFD) is the consumer version meant for non-RAID setups. The other, cheaper, ADFD version uses TLER (time limited error recovery) for RAID. Most drives perform extensive error recovery around bad sectors and the drive can appear unresponsive to the controller and be dropped from a RAID array requiring a lengthy rebuild. TLER limits the recovery to 7 seconds and then defers error handling to the RAID controller, which it is well-equipped to do. The point is you don't want TLER on an non-RAID drive! See www.wdc.com/en/library/sata/2579-001098.pdf. Use ADFD for RAID and AHFD for single drive setups.
Reviewed By: bently, 5/16/2006 4:56:39 AM
This reviewer reports that his/her technical understanding of this type of product is high and has owned this product for less than 1 day.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful. Did you?
The guy is a noob. Nowhere in that PDF does it state that it's only limited to the non-window Raptor. Simply that's a WD technology.
The drive mechanisms on them both are *the same*.
http://www.tomshardware.com/2006/02/...ead/page5.html
"As a matter of fact, the top cover part is the only real difference between both models, giving WD quite a bit of flexibility in producing either to meet demand."
http://www.storagereview.com/article...500ADFD_2.html
"As attractive as the concept may sound to enthusiasts, the two different versions do not feature significantly differing firmware. Creating and maintaining two code bases would increase overhead and product prices that would not proportionally translate into better performance. Here at least, differences really do extend only skin deep. Thus, given that the drives are mechanically and ********ically identical..."
EDIT: W.T.F??? Why on earth would "e-l-e-c-t-r-o-n" be a banned word??!@#
LOLOL
********
hehe
*Edit: Oh, and listen to Soul Assassin. He knows what he's talking about when it comes to Raptors. Even if I don't agree with him. ;)