Every drive maker has had their bad run. WD bit big time a couple years ago - I think they are excellent today. Seagate had nick names a decade ago.. and actually had a major problem just a a year or so ago with 60GB and 80GB notebook drives that were in a lot of Apple systems as well as PCs where the heads would effectively self destruct resulting in total failure and low data recovery prospect due to the damage the head failure damage caused. And yes - Hitachi (actually, then IBM's HD division) had the 'deathstars' 75GXP 3.5" drives about 6 years ago.. the ones produced in one particular plant were the ones with issue...
Hard drives from every maker do fail. Fortunately, very very rarely these days as quality control is good. I am happy to say though - while the percentage of failure across the board for all we see is less than 1% within 12 months - I can honestly say that we see the best reliability from Hitachi. It's a small difference when talking less than 10 per thousand to begin with.... but in that number, significant difference comparatively. Part of that, IMHO, comes from Hitachi being a little slower sometimes putting out new product lines. And that can be a good thing - WD has a more active release schedule than Hitachi - but Seagate takes the cake.... And when was the last time heard of firmware issues with a Hitachi or WD HD?
You go with what works - but what things are always changing with technology and in the industry in general. And when it comes to hard drives - nothing else matters when you've got the lemon that fails. Physical failures are, again, very rare - but other things can go wrong leading to data loss too - and no matter what, always have a good backup.
Black Landlord wrote:
[quote=space-time]
the price is about the same, but the Hitachi has a mail-in-rebate of $20 which I could use toward a good external case...
on the other hand, amazon ships free...
I know some here rave about Hitachi (sorry OWC Larry) but I won't touch them since the stock deathstar in my MDD failed after only 2 years of regular use.