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Your cart is empty.Toshiba DT01ACA100 1TB 7200RPM SATA3/SATA 6.0 GB/s 32MB Hard Drive (3.5 inch)
Samson
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2025
Exact replacement for the one that crashed in my 10 yr old Dell desktop. Just format, load recent backup and go.
Chee Peng Lee
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 3, 2024
I bought DT01ACA300 to replace the faulty DT01ACA100 for my desktop computer.The read/write speeds are impressive. It handles large files effortlessly and performs well even during heavy usage.Considering its performance and features, DT01ACA300 offers great value for money. It’s competitively priced compared to similar products.Overall, I am very satisfied with DT01ACA300. It meets all my needs and performs exceptionally well. I would highly recommend it to anyone looking for a reliable storage solution.
Cassandra
Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2021
Ordered it. Thought it was a great deal. I'd purchased another HDD prior to this from another brand but within a couple weeks it was giving me the squeak of death. So I put what I got back from that, towards this one. Unfortunately seems it may be outside influences which are causing these HDDs to go bad.Pros: Size was good. Reasonable. Price was pretty good too. Was excited to use it for storage. Perfect HDD for what I needed with a little extra room to wok with.Cons: The HDD came pretty much DOA. It arrived in a static free sleeve, and an unpadded plastic envelope and was dropped by the delivery guy on concrete next to my front door.I wish it had been a different situation, but given how frail these drives are, it's likely sustained damage due to poor packaging. I think if you want legit, solid, long term reviews, Toshiba needs to step up their game and ensure their products are arriving safely.
Cliente de
Reviewed in Mexico on October 7, 2020
Lamento no haber hecho la reseña antes, pero igualmente me alegro por ello ya que tuve tiempo de sobre para probarloEsta marca, simplemente, me encanta. Los discos de esta marca me han salido muy buenos. Llevo aprox 4 años con este, y ninguna falla.Los primeros años lo use con el sistema operativo y después, cuando compre un ssd, lo use como disco de almacenamiento en la misma maquina.Es una maquina que uso para el trabajo y entretenimiento, esta encendida aprox 10 horas al día como mínimo, de lunes a sábado, y otro tanto los domingos. Muchas veces la deje prendida las 24 horas, durante semanas enteras.Diré que para almacenamiento funciona muy bien, aunque, depende de lo que guardes, pero con el tiempo 3 teras se hacen poco.Para videojuegos, la carga y eso, se siente algo lento. Así que no es lo suyo, aunque no va mal.En conclusión, buena marca, buen disco. Según es diseñado para servidores, yo lo use como almacenamiento, así que funciona bien.Consejo: si encuentran algún disco de 4 o 5 teras por un precio similar, no lo duden, vayan por los 5 teras, en verdad que a la larga, hacen falta..
Frank
Reviewed in Italy on February 2, 2019
Gli HD Toshiba sono frai miei più usati, usuro molto i miei Hd e nel mio fisso ne ho sempre 5 fra cui uno SSD dov'è il sistema operativo.Non è facile trovare un meccanico che offra velocità e durabilità contemporaneamente, beh, questo lo fa. In anni di uso lo posso affermare con certezza. Riesce a fare trasferimenti ad alta velocità senza grosse oscillazioni e praticamente non lo sento.Ho appena tolto uno da un TB che era diventato molto lento e l'ho sostituito con questo . Ormai sono anni che utilizzo gli SSD e da poco gli M2 ma, se mai dovessi essere costretto a usare un meccanico che non costi una fortuna, non esiterei a scegliere questo.
Miguel Calderón
Reviewed in Mexico on May 4, 2018
Antes de comprar este disco probé con la marca Seagate, recibí un producto defectuoso y dos reemplazos con problemas. Después de consultar con un amigo que trabaja en TIC's que los discos de Toshiba son los que presentan menos fallos.Este disco lo utilizo como almacenamiento en un servidor con Gitlab.--- Actualización 2019Está funcionando 24 horas los 365 días de la semana. Algunos días ha fallado el sumistro eléctrico y hasta el momento no presenta fallas.
Fernando Muñoz Guarneros
Reviewed in Mexico on January 16, 2018
Precio y calidad, sorprendido por el articulo de buena marca, la tasa de transferencia de datos es buena, muy silencioso en su operación, el empaque es sencillo pero efectivo para su transportación y ayudo bastante a mi pc en cuanto al espacio de almacenamiento.
JT Farley
Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 2015
I'm going to start by saying that my sole reason for purchasing this hard drive is to upgrade the hard drive in my PS4.There are two ways to upgrade a PS4 hard drive using a 3.5" desktop hard drive. 1) Using the Nyko Data Bank 2) Using an external enclosure to power the hard drive, and running a SATA extension cable from the extension or hard drive to the PS4.I chose to use an external enclosure to house and power this Toshiba hard drive and run a SATA extension cable from the hard drive to the PS4. I'm not going to go into great detail about the process or set-up, but I will be happy to answer any questions and provide help for anyone that may have questions on how I ran my set-up.I spent approximately 2 months doing research and reading every single review for over 10 different hard drives I was considering putting into my PS4. I had narrowed it down to 3 hard drives, but still spent weeks contemplating which would be the best option. In the end, I chose none of those options. One day while doing research, I stumbled upon hdd.userbenchmark.com. This is a fantastic website that shows real-world statistics for a wealth of different hard drives. I was able to compare side-by-side each one of the hard drives that I was considering for my upgrade. Upon chance, I found this Toshiba hard drive on the list. This hard drive currently ranks at #10 on the speed/performance list, and easily out-performs all of the other hard drives I was considering. And the best part? It's at least $20 cheaper than all the other drives I was considering!Now on to the hard drive itself. I'm just your average every day consumer, and I don't have much experience in internal hard drives. I learned a great deal about them through all the research I performed before making my purchase. I could not possibly be more satisfied with my purchase. This hard drive has exceeded all of my expectations. After installing the drive (the PS4 software installed much quicker with this hard drive than my previous upgrade drive) I proceeded to install all of my PS4 games from discs. This took not quite half as long as it did than with the other hard drive I originally used to upgrade the PS4. Loading games and game saves is much quicker with this drive, and the actual processing and performance of the drive is a huge improvement as well. With the other drive, there would be stuttering and delays in graphics rendering while playing large open world games such as GTA 5 and Shadow of Mordor. There are no issues like that whatsoever with this drive. This also wasn't as much of a concern to me, but this drive is whisper quiet. It also doesn't produce as much heat as other 3.5" 7200 RPM drives do. So that being said, I think placing this drive in the Nyko Data Bank to upgrade the PS4 would be absolutely fine.I will be happy to try and answer any questions regarding the hard drive or my set-up. I absolutely without any reservations recommend this hard drive for an upgrade to the PS4!
m6502
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2014
[Updated 5/28/2015]This review is for the 3TB model, DT01ACA300. This is a bare drive with only whatever packaging is used by the seller. You can also buy it in a box with foam padding under the model name "PH3300U". I can't comment on Amazon's packing, because I bought it from a different site.Because drives and firmware sometimes change, I should specify mine. I don't see a clearly labeled firmware version on the label of my drive, but it does say "DRIVE REV AAA AA00 / BB0". It also is marked with the number HDKPC08A0A01. This unit was made in Aug-2014. On a scale, it weighed 1.473lbs.Real capacity is 2.729TB when measured in proper base-2 units.This is a 7200rpm drive. It uses 1TB platters.Performance and Noise=================After 6 months of use, I recently tested this drive's performance under Linux Mint 17.1 using the "gnome-disks" utility. Screenshot is attached. Please note that the linear transfer rate values in that graph are base-10 measurements, not base-2. They would be a bit less when expressed in base 2.This drive has moderate access times for a 7200rpm drive, but it is quiet. This is a popular formula - faster drives are louder, and people tend to complain about that nowadays. The access time measured was 15.18msec average with a test of 5000 random seeks. This test covered the full 3TB capacity, not short stroked. I could not hear any seek noise during this test unless I put my ear next to the drive, and then it was just faintly audible. However, I do not have a quiet PC. People who build quiet PCs might hear seek noises more easily than I do. To me, I couldn't even hear the test running until I got my ear next to the drive. I also tested a 4TB Toshiba MD04ACA400, and observed that they are complete opposites in respect to seek noise vs speed. This 3TB DT01ACA300 is the slower but much quieter drive - it's inline with most modern consumer 7200rpm drives.Reliability=======I've had this drive in operation for 6 months. It was initially subjected to a burn-in period using the linux utility 'badblocks'. That took 48 hours of continuous stress to complete, which it did with no errors. It then completed the SMART extended self-test, again with no errors. The intention was to weed out any infant mortality before putting real data on the drive.Since that time, up until a few days ago, it has been used as the parity drive for a SnapRAID array. In that role, the drive spent most of it's time spun down. When it was accessed, it would see continuous stress for a few hours at a time.Recently I've moved it to file storage, and another drive has replaced it for parity. This drive is still working fine, it does not have any faults logged in SMART.During the initial burn-in period, the highest temperature recorded in the SMART data was 38C, probably about 10C above ambient. That was during the very long 'badblocks' test with a fan blowing through the drive cage. I don't know how much warmer it would get without the fan, but every case will be different. Opinions vary but I'd say anything up to 45C is nothing to worry about.No "Intellipark"============I do not believe this drive has any auto head parking behavior. I'm glad for this, because I believe head parking should be left under control of the operating system, not arbitrarily forced by a drive's firmware.I used the linux "watch" command to watch the "load/unload" counter in the drive's SMART data with a timer of 5 minutes. The drive was otherwise unmounted and not being accessed. This means the only access to the drive was on those 5 minute intervals. Therefore, if the drive were auto-parking itself, I should have seen the "load/unload" counter increase at every 5 minute update. I did not - the "load/unload" counter stayed constant, and was at a very low number. That is why I'm convinced it does not auto-park.It should still respond to head parking commands from the OS, as any hard drive has been capable of doing since the days of MS-DOS. It most definitely responds to spin-down commands, I've had the OS configured to spin it down after 30 minutes of inactivity and this has worked fine.Partitioning comments---------------------The tool I used for partioning this drive was 'gdisk'. This is a linux utility which is very similar to the familiar 'fdisk', except it is designed to work with GPT partitioning instead of traditional MBR. In a GUI environment, 'gparted' is another way to partition the drive. At the command line, the console equivalent is 'parted', but I used 'gdisk' instead because it was easier to understand.Although technically there may be some workarounds, GPT partitioning is essentially required if you want to partition drives larger than 2TB. If you are only seeing something like 700GB of space on this drive, it is because you are using an outdated MBR partitioning tool which will not work properly with drives of this size.Under Windows, note that 3TB drives (anything > 2TB) cannot be properly used with 32-bit Windows XP or older versions. This is because they don't support GPT partitions. Limited support for GPT was added for 64-bit WinXP, but not for a system drive, only for a data disk. GPT support is better in later Windows versions.In an experiment on my system, I found that >2TB drives don't even appear in the WinXP-32 Disk Management screen. It only became visible if I used HDAT2 to reduce the drive's reported size to 2TB.>2TB drives might work with patched versions of Vista, but I don't know. I expect at least Windows 7 should support them. Please research this before buying.This would not be a problem for using the drive over a network. It's only an issue for mounting it directly on the system.If you're using WinXP-32, then stick to the 2TB model or below. Those sizes will work fine. However, the remaining point to be aware of is that these drives (even the smaller sized models) have 4KB sectors with 512 byte emulation. This is something older Windows versions don't understand. The partitions need to be aligned with these 4KB sectors for the drive to perform it's best. This won't keep it from working but it's a performance issue.Don't use the partitioning that is built-in with WinXP, or the alignment will not be correct and performance will suffer. Instead, I suggest downloading 'gparted' and running that tool from a bootable CD or flash drive. This tool has an option to align your partitions on a 1MB boundary. Use that option while creating the partitions, and you'll be good. Then reboot back to Windows and let it format the partition(s) that you already created. Formatting under XP is fine, you just don't want to let it create the partitions.
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