What's the best external firm drive for the price?

I only just bought a Western Digital MyBook, and after a week it crashed and my computer stopped recognizing it. I'm afraid of this scheduled again, and am unsure of what to buy. The Fantom Titanium II and SimpleTech both have my eye, but I can't find ample reviews to make a apposite decision.

Can you any help me find a site near good hardware reviews, or endow with me some of your own experiences with Fantom and SimpleTech drives? External individual!

Answer:
I haven't used either intuitively.

The first question is, do you know why the Mybook 'crashed?'

Since it's an external not easy drive, then that channel you have a HDD contained by your computer as well? Or have that been removed?

Leading to the second sound out, what is the external harddrive for? Computer use, or backing up data/saving files?

Point individual, I would make sure the MyBook still works. The crashing you experienced is 99% not the failure of the MyBook, but rather a responsibility by you or your system. I understand the logic, within thinking that if you get a differnt type of HDD, that the problem may not come to pass again; but, given that it was most promising your computer's fault, afterwards it would also be most likely to ensue again, no matter what HDD you buy.

Something tell me that the RAID format of that harddrive, wasn't supported properly by your Windows OS, and caused the crash. Unless you are holding especially sensitive facts on the HDD, RAID isn't necessary. "SATA" would be more potent, and more cheap.

If you are hell bent on getting another one, then you stipulation to include what size and performance you are interested contained by.


The Titanium II comes in pretty a few different maximum capacity types of :
120, 200, 250, 320, 400, 500.

Reviews aren't recurrently given for hard drives, unless they act some special function, so it's a hit and miss on that bit.

The Titanium and MyBook will offer almost the same presentation. It would be down to aesthetics and cost.


This is something that might work better
http://www.newegg.com/product/product.as...


Newegg is the most popular States side computer parts company at this time.

There are different capacity or slightly slower version of that hard disk found here:

http://www.newegg.com/product/productlis...


You could RMA(return) that MyBook and try another.

Either route, as long as the hard disk is :

USB 2.0/"High speed USB"
SATA
7200 RPM(or higher)
Has the amount of gigabyte space you want/need

Then you're set.

As for cooling, yes, OEM/internal tough disks, placed in some external shell, can roast up fairly at full tilt. Average hard disk runs at roughly speaking 40c. So that would be a bit pointless. Maybe more cheap, but.risky.

Such hard drives shouldn't 'melt down' unless you use them constantly, and if it's not your MAIN drive, after there's no reason to enjoy it on all the time. Though that's down to the user's requests. There's not much you can do to cool an external hard drive, but if it wants extra cooling then something is wrong and it should be returned as defective.
External not easy drives are *really* easy to build.

If you jump to a computer shop and ask them what parts you need (and hutch that houses it + the actual hard drive) -- they will be capable of show you and it's literally as easy and plugging things together -- you really don't have need of to be a techie to do this.

++ it should save you in the order of half the cost of a pre-made one.
I've have a La Cie firewire 60gig, connected to Mac / PC / Linux OS, both 110volt and 220volt electricity, going on 15 years now and their tech support have always answered my emails.
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