Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 1TB Hard Drive
Combining proven components, state-of-the-art technology and expertise in volume manufacturing, the Seagate® Barracuda® 7200.12 drive—the 11th generation of this award-winning desktop hard drive family—delivers 1 TB of high-performing, eco-friendly digital storage. Designed with industry-leading acoustics and power levels, and award-winning Seagate PMR technology, the Barracuda 7200.12 drive offers the ideal combination of world-class technology and lowest total cost of ownership.
This Drive Holds
- 424 two-hour DVD-quality movies or
- 1500 hours of VHS-quality video or
- 880 days of around-the-clock MP3 audio or
- 373,000 vivid digital photos or
- 2132 action-packed games!
Specifications
Drive Type:
Internal
Capacity:
1TB
Interface:
SATA 3.0Gb/s
Interface Type:
SATA
Spindle Speed (RPM):
7200
Buffer Memory:
32MB
Data Transfer Rate on Serial ATA:
Up to 3000 Mb/sec
Form Factor:
3.5"
Detailed Features
Key Advantages
Delivers 1-TB capacity
Ships with the industry's most reliable and proven perpendicular magnetic recording technology
Delivers high performance
115 MB/s sustained data rate
32-MB cache buffer
Environmentally friendly
Idles at only 8.0 watts, enabling customers to build low-power systems
Meets strict RoHS environmental requirements
Leverages best combination of technology (areal density, PMR) and proven components for volume availability
Customer Reviews and Rating
Customer Rating:
4.2
Customer Reviews:
13
Have an opinion on this product that you would like to share? If so, please take a few moments to write your rating and review.
Value
4.2
Features
4.3
Quality
3.8
Performance
4.3
Sort By:
Buy - Don't let other reviews scare you.
Reviewer:
Jer on
Nov 09, 2009 Customer Rating:
5.0
Value
5.0
Features
5.0
Quality
5.0
Performance
5.0
I was originally hesitant to purchase this drive because of several of the other reviews. Based on the fact that we purchased nothing but Seagate drives at my former place of employment and personal experience with prior systems that I built, I purchased 2 of these drives and they are absolutely great in all aspects.
Good overall hard drive
Reviewer:
CJAZZ on
Nov 09, 2009 Customer Rating:
4.0
Value
4.0
Features
4.0
Quality
4.0
Performance
4.0
Lots of space, low cost, reputable company.
Easy to put in, easy to connect.
Good overall, thus far.
great harddrive
Reviewer:
brian on
Nov 03, 2009 Customer Rating:
5.0
Value
5.0
Features
5.0
Quality
5.0
Performance
5.0
ive had mine for almost a year and i love it never had any problems with it its a great value i recomend this productto anyone.
POS - its very loud
Reviewer:
r3d on
Oct 31, 2009 Customer Rating:
1.8
Value
2.0
Features
2.0
Quality
1.0
Performance
2.0
I had a 500G 7200.12 which so far worked fine, so i've decided to buy the 1TB version.
Turns out this drive is crap. It was louder than my 10 yr old drive. When it does a seek, it sounded like the airplane taking off, and my computer shook.
I have a very noisy system, with a S-L-I card setup making a lot of noise, this drive overpowered it all. The 500G version is quiet i cant hear it.
This monster was damn loud.
I also did a benchmark - 117MB sustained rate. So, all the noise with nothing in return. Maybe it was faulty who knows, i didn't take a chance exchanged it for W-D 1TB green drive
good value but bad quality
Reviewer:
akys on
Oct 30, 2009 Customer Rating:
3.0
Value
4.0
Features
4.0
Quality
1.0
Performance
3.0
I bought one about 9 months ago. It crashed after 3 months. Called Seagate warranty and got a re-cerified one but you have to pay to ship the bad one back. The re-cerified one lasted about another 4 months before it crashed again. Called Seagate again and got another re-cerified one, my 3rd one. Hope this one will last. Just paying the shipping cost to return the drive is adding up. I would not use it for permanent storage as it cannot be trusted. My other 4 hard drives (2 Hitachi, 2 WD) are stilling going strong after 1 to 3 years. Stay away from Seagate.
Important OEM Hard
Drive Note:
OEM hard drives do not include cables, software, or hardware (screws, brackets,
etc.). Full manufacturer's warranty applies.
Please Note:
In order to properly access the full capacity of an ATA interface hard drive
or partition larger than 137GB and properly support 48-bit logical block addressing,
Windows Vista , Windows XP Service Pack 1 or Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 are required. This
issue does not affect SCSI hard drives.
Even The Best Hard Drives Die.
Do You Back Up?
Businesses of all sizes
are witnessing an explosion in the volume of data they hold. Whether it is
the result of the Internet, email, or increasingly heavy and media-rich
application software, there is a massive growth in the volume of data all
around. Conservative estimates place data growth at approximately 80% per
year. Data is increasingly being recognized as one of the real assets of a
company, and losing this data would cause severe damage to any organization.
Data loss can be very costly, particularly for
organizations in the small and medium business (SMB) market where the
difference between survival and closure can rest on the ability to recover
from a disaster. At the very least, critical data loss will have a financial
impact on companies of all sizes:
Data type
Time to re-create 20 MB
Cost
Sales and marketing
19 days
$17,000
Accounting
21 days
$19,000
Engineering
42 days
$98,000
The financial impact on a company is a combination
of loss of business, low productivity, legal action, and the cost of
re-creating data. A study showed that the cost of re-creating just 20 MB of
data can be extensive!
Your best solution, is an external drive as a
backup. You can have multiple drives, and it is much easier restore
from a portable external drive, as opposed to CDs or DVDs.
Today's Backup Options
With ever increasing hard drive sizes, how do you protect your valuable
data? CDs are only 720+ MBs, and even DVDs are limited to a few
Gigabytes. So what do you do to back up hundreds of Gigabytes? Here
are some great and inexpensive options:
High Capacity USB Thumb Drives: USB Thumb Drives are now
available in sizes as large as 64GB (soon to be even more). While
the USB interface is somewhat slow, these make an ideal solution for their
small compact size. Thumb drives are perfect for storing in files,
or other compact spaces. While their cost per GB is somewhat high,
their convenience, USB interface, size, and extremely light weight, make
them a very attractive option.
External Hard Drives Now you have a wide variety of
options for external hard drives. 1TB (Terabyte) External Drives are
now available for less than $200.00. External drives come in a wide
range of sizes, speeds, and interfaces. They are available with USB
(the slowest), Firewire (medium speed), and SATA/eSATA (the fastest).
When selecting an external drive, it is important to consider how you will
use the drive, and the interface limitations of your computer. If
you have a laptop that only has USB ports, this would be your best
(possibly only) option. If you have USB & Firewire, get a drive that
has Firewire for the performance boost. If your system has a SATA or
eSata port, get a drive with this option - it will give you true hard
drive to hard drive performance.
However, also consider where you might need to restore the data. USB
is the most universal, in that almost all systems have USB ports. If
your system dies, and you need to restore your data, this may be your most
important consideration.
One last consideration is to keep your backup drive continuously
connected, or only connect it during backups. The general idea of
backups is to have a copy of your data in case your system fails - which
they do. But you may also want secure protected backups in a safe or
safe deposit box. Regardless, external hard drives offer an
outstanding solution for backing up your data, and the cost per GB is
quite low.
Hard Drive Docks (Toasters) An incredibly simple, yet
functional new product category emerged in 2008: Hard Drive Toasters (Hard Drive
Docks). This device lets you plug in regular internal hard drives as
though they were pop-in flash drives. You drop in your hard drive,
and the dock instantly gives your system access to that drive, without
wiring, or power connections - it's all done by the hard drive toaster.
This way you can use any compatible hard drive as an external removable
hard drive for backup purposes!
Online Backup Still another option is to use an
online backup service. These come in two forms:
• Backup to another computer over the Internet
• Backup to a central server using the Internet
The first of these can work very well, and automatically backups when you
are online. The Microsoft OneCare service is one example. It
can backup your data from your system to another in your OneCare account
across the Internet automatically, regardless of where you are.
The second involves trusting your critical data to someone else's servers,
and usually no real guarantee that your data will always be there.
If they loose your data, they just refund your fee. This service may
be fine for a couple of letters, but business critical data needs to be
accessible forever. For this reason, you are better advised to look
to a hardware solution that you control.
Backup Software Many products come with backup
software included, such as External Hard Drives, and Antivirus products
like
CA Security Suite. Most offer excellent features for automated
backups. But remember, backup software and devices, are only as good
as your willingness to use them! So backup regularly, and backup often.
This Drive Includes
a SATA (Serial ATA) Interface
Serial ATA (SATA) hard
drives have become the new standard in hard drive technology.
Motherboard manufacturers now include SATA inputs on their boards.
SATA hard drives result in less clutter and increased airflow in the
computer system, because SATA cables are dramatically narrower than
EIDE cables. Some older computer system motherboards don't have SATA
ports, but a PCI SATA controller card can be installed to add support
for SATA drives. If you don't know whether your computer has SATA
ports on the motherboard, refer to your computer or motherboard documentation
or contact the motherboard manufacturer.
Curious About The Differences Between Seria
ATA (SATA) and Parallel ATA (Ultra ATA)? As time passed, increasing hard disk
transfer rate demands have forced the ATA interface specification to be
continuously updated, to avoid becoming the limiting factor in disk I/O
performance. As consumers embrace new usage models such as digital video
creation and editing, digital audio storage and playback, file sharing over
high-speed networks, and other data intensive applications, demands on hard
drive throughput have increased even further. To keep pace, the
storage interconnect had to evolve beyond the Ultra (Parallel) ATA
technology. The current approach is Serial ATA: a serial implementation of the
parallel Ultra ATA interface. With this paradigm shift in I/O design, the
roadmap of ATA was extended beyond the theoretical limits of the Ultra ATA bus.
Click To Learn More »
Why Do I Have
Less Drive Space?
Your hard drive may show less space than the published specifications due to
a number of reasons.
The way size is calculated and
displayed.
Any "Partitions" on the disk will
change the total in a specific partition.
Hidden files and folders decrease
available space.
Compression increases the apparent
size, but not the physical size.
Drives larger than the OS or Drivers
natively supports.
First, the definition of a megabytes
(or gigabytes) is a unit of data storage capacity measured in 1,048,576
bytes (or 1024KB). The larger the numbers, the more apparent the size
difference will be when listing the size as megabytes (or gigabytes) versus
bytes. Actually, both numbers are correct. The noticeable difference is due
to the 1024KB definition of a megabyte. This is why a 95.3GB hard drive can
also be listed as having 102 billion bytes of total space. Just think
of it as "round off" In the screen shot at right: The first number is the total number of bytes,
the second number is based on the number of megabytes or gigabytes.
Second, some computers have a
non-DOS hard drive partition that is used for features such as Save to Disk,
Hibernation, or Recovery. This partition is not normally reported by the
operating system, although it can be viewed using a disk partition utility.
This is very common on desktops and laptops. NOTE: Partition information will be created or
formatted automatically during initial system setup and a system recovery.
Third, by default, all system files
are hidden and cannot be seen. This may adversely affect the reporting of
available hard drive space. You can set your Folder Options so you view
system and hidden files and folders, but do be careful as changes to system
files can adversely affect your system.
Fourth, if you turn on Compression
for a drive, it will increase reported free space and used space, but since
compression is based upon the actual contents, this number is not fixed, but
will change as files are added or changed.
Fifth, older operating systems did
not support some of today's larger drives, so the total space reported may
be much smaller than the drive specifications.
It is also worth noting that bad sectors
are corrected by your operating system and can change the total drive space,
free space, or used space as well.
So as long as a drive is reporting a value
approximately close to the specification value, you can be comfortable that
you received the right drive and that you are getting to correct data
storage. Of course, tuning of your drive's partitions and options can
yield optimal values, but this is not something for the average user to
explore.
A Look at Hard Drives What you need to know before you buy; the inside scoop on what to look for in a hard drive. We reveal the hidden secrets about capacity, RPMs, buffer size and more!
Click Here To Learn
More »
How to Install a Hard Drive
A Step-by-Step Guide to Clean, Fast, and Easy Hard Drive Installation
Easy to follow, photo-illustrated steps for your no-hassle hard drive installation.
Click Here To Learn
More »
Having
Issues With Your PC?
Here Are Some Common Problems And Solutions!
Of course, there a thousand little things can go wrong with an average
PC. But many problems are common, and have common solutions.
Click Here to
Learn More »
Manufactured by:
Seagate Warranty provided by:
Seagate Limited Warranty:
36 months parts;
36 months labor
Mfg Part No:
ST31000528AS UPC No:
890552658862 Box Size:
( Length:
11, Width:
8, Depth:
3 )
Shipping Weight:
1.5000 pound(s)
Click here for full warranty and support information
Limited Warranty: A full text version of the limited warranty
may be obtained by mailing a self addressed, stamped envelope to the
address below and requesting the warranty for item number:
TSD-1000AS3
TigerDirect.com
Warranty Information
7795 W. Flagler St. Suite 35
Miami, FL. 33144