I've had several Maxtor drives fail in this way this year, perhaps many out there are. One was a 30gig DiamondMax Plus 40 model 53073U6 (Warranty ends Nov 03) and an older 20gig 7200rpm Maxtor, both IDE.
Both drives would eventually pass all the PowerMax tests as well as a low level format. The version of PowerMax didn't matter - newest 2003 or 2001 version - it's just that due to the slow read it would take a long time to pass the tests.
Maxtor replaced the 20 gig. I obtained an RMA by calling and talking to a tech a few months back. When I called about the 30gig today the tech wanted to wait for the drive to fail enough to give a PowerMax code.
The fact that I can get a Maxtor tech on the line who admits the drive isn't working (based on the fact that to whichever computer the drive goes the 90-second quick test isn't finishing five minutes out and counting) and who wants to get it back to Maxtor but cannot give me an RMA number until the PowerMax utility gives a code because that's the policy (and who is even hinting I should just make it have a code somehow), has me asking what the heck is going on at Maxtor?
I'm wondering just how many of these slow-read drives are out there working well enough to keep them going until the warranty ends while the end-user is wondering what the heck is making their system so darn slow they can hardly use it.
I had personally used the 20gig in a W2K server and I fought the slowing down all the way using all the speed-up software I could find plus adding more SDRAM, I ended up using it for six months as a PCAnywhere terminal I'd use to log onto another computer that wasn't do darn slow. I only discovered it was the drive slow-reading when I upgraded and went to reformat the 20gig drive to use it elsewhere. The experience was useful though as this month when I had a client complain about a sudden slow down (the 30gig) I checked the drive first and sure enough it was a slow-read Maxtor slowing things down.
My two-cents is to go ahead and trust what your tests are telling you.
Rob