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FPSLabs Home: Seagate Barracuda 750GB: One Really BIG Fish

By: Stu Grubbs - Published November 12, 2006 at 7:41 PM EST - Writer Archive
Seagate's massive Barracuda 7200.10 750GB hard drive is made possible by perpendicular recording and brilliant engineering. Does all the extra size detract from the performance of the drive?

Category: Storage
Manufacturer: Seagate
Product: Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB SATA II
Price: $339.99

Seagate has been a leader in the storage world for decades. It's no surprise that they have been dominating this past year with release after release of new products in the notebook, enterprise, and desktop sectors. Back in January, they released their first venture in perpendicular recording. The Momentus 5400.3 was the highest capacity 2.5" hard drive at the time. Shortly thereafter, perpendicular recording was made available to the enterprise market and now Seagate has made a model for the consumer. This model is a mammoth hard drive weighing in at a capacity of 750 GBs. This is the Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750 GB Hard Drive (Model# ST3750640AS).

Specifications

  • Model Number: ST3750640AS
  • Capacity: 750 GB
  • Speed: 7200 RPM
  • Seek time: 4.16 ms avg
  • Cache: 16MB
  • Interface: SATA II (3.0 GB/s)
The specs show us that this hard drive is not only built to bring the monstrous capacity, but to deliver from a speed aspect as well. It is equipped to handle SATA II which is twice the transfer rate of SATA I's 1.5 GB/s. The difference here is not in drive indexing, but rather in the burst rate. The cache size and the seek time are right on par with most other hard drives available. In fact, the only superiority the 150GB Raptor X has on this Barracuda is 2,500 RPMs. However, the Barracuda is heavily equipped with some additional features.

These features include:
  • Perpendicular Recording
  • Native Command Queuing (NCQ)
  • Adaptive Fly Height
  • Clean Sweep
  • Directed Offline Scan
  • Seagate SoftSonic
  • Enhanced G-Force Protection

A common misconception is that bigger is always slower. In today's world the smaller and more sleek something is, the faster it must be. This misconception was more than likely born from the physical realm where things like aerodynamics and weight come into play. What needs to be understood is that this is not the case when dealing with computer components, more specifically, hard drives. Capacity has no effect on the speed of the drive.

Seagate has effectively armed the 7200.10 with the latest and greatest hard drive technologies, including perpendicular recording, native command queuing, and the SATA II (3.0 GB/s) interface. The benefits of perpendicular recording don't just stop at higher capacity; when combined with the higher areal density, it improves the overall dynamics of the hard drive. Because there are fewer mechanical components and it uses the more reliable method of disk writing, things like heat, noise, and power consumption are reduced, while shock tolerance is improved. This greatly improves the reliability of the drive.

Seagate was kind enough to provide us with the ability to test not one, not two, but three of these babies to prove their confidence in any configuration. Let's take a look at the drives...

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User Comments

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Damn thats one beast of a HDD
Steve Smith is Pro!
2
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Damn... $399.99 for that... Woah thats really sick :D
3
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#2 It is $339.99
[b]Executive Editor[/b] - [i]FPSLabs[/i] - FPSLABS V2 @ FPSLabs.com
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I wonder who will need 750gb... :D
Practice makes perfect.
5
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750 gigs? That's a whole lotta porn.
"Get in the fast lane Grandma, the bingo game's ready to roll!"
6
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would of liked to see these 750s against a 75 or 150 Raptor too. i will be getting a high capacity hdd soon as my 200gb one is full. wonder if a raid of these outperforms a single 150gb raptor.

had to goto anandtech to find that out. http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc...
[b]Mixing up some Lmaonade![/b]
7
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Now that's a good drive, not too far away from the raptors performance so if you need the space just get this.
I play CS on a toaster
8
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#6 anandtech has a few more resources than us :D
9
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its a monster
batman for sure
10
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#9
me and my 160g hd are both scared.
got some handy stuff on my profile check it out
11
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oo dang ... i sure want one of those
Intel C2D e6300 - BFG 7950GT OCed 256mb - 2GB Crucial DDR2 800 - ECS PT890A - 200GB SeagateBarracuda
12
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yes! endlesss pr0N!
13
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thats not really a fair test vs Western Digital.... 80GB vs 750GB?? what kind of test is that? and an 8MB cache for WD vs 16 for the Seagate. Id like to see a fair test.

say Seagate's http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp..
vs WD's http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp..
14
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sry double post

This comment was edited at 12/22/2006 7:04 PM
15
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would this be a good buy?
Every Villain is Lemons

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