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need help in deciding which hardrive(s) to get 1

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estesflyer

Programmer
Dec 19, 2000
284
US
hiya. I'm currently building a new amd machine.

Currently, i have a 350 watt enermax psu, w/ two fans (very nice)

A full tower case, w/ a few case fans pulling air through it

An amd t-bird 1gig chip, clocked @ 266 FSB

An ECS k7vza m/b supporting 266 FSB, Ultra ATA 33/66

Nvidia Geforce 2 mmx 32 meg video card

and thats all i have so far...
I am wanting to get a nice big, fast hardisk. :)

I was thinking something between 40 and 60 gigs, w/ 7200 rpm, and atleast 8.3 seek time.

Any suggestions for a hard disk that might run nicely w/ the specs above. :)

TIA

- Rusty
 
I personally like Maxtor products.
i have a similar system to yours but my MB is a A7A266
I have a Diamond Max 60 ATA100 7200 hard drive. it runs quite nicely. In my opinion i would stay away from western digital, ive seen many many WD drives fail. if ya want to spend the extra buck ibm makes a drive that cruises at 10000rpm.

Go to and check it out.
 
ok, so either maxtor, or ibm would be nice? what about seagate?

and what is scsi? I've heard of it, but what makes it so special (not to mention expensive)

- Rusty
 
I say ditto to the Maxtor recommendation. That is all I use now. They are about as dependable a product as you'll find, easy to install and the performance is great.

If you are building a high-performance box, I suggest you go the extra mile and get two drives and a Promise Technologies RAID card. Hard drives do fail occasionally and there is something to be said for fault tolerance.
 
For my money it's Quantum. I know everyone has their favs though.
SCSI stands for "small computer serial interface" I think, someone correct me if I'm wrong, and is a lot more expensive than IDE. They run faster and 1 SCSI Controller can hold up to 7? SCSI devices.(or 6) If your mainboard does not have a SCSI Controller built on board, you will have to purchase one. I'd just go with the IDE. Every day above ground is a GOOD DAY!!!
 
Small Computer Systems Interface. But still, for the price you'll pay for a scsi you could get a RAID array that would perform faster and be of equal or less cost. Go with IDE. That's my recommendation. Justin

Feel free to email me at:
beckham@mailbox.orst.edu

"3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population."
 
UH, Yea, thats what I meant?, osuman. LOL Thanks.
Every day above ground is a GOOD DAY!!!
 
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