Miscellaneous Aspects and Concluding Remarks

There are a multitude of options targeting the same market segment when it comes to DAS units with single hard drives. As we saw in the performance evaluation section, there is really not much to differentiate between the various options in the same product class when it comes to the usage patterns of the average consumer. Most consumers would do well to choose the cheapest model at the time of purchase. In order to escape this rut of being a commodity, manufacturers have started to offer value additions to their DAS products. For example, Seagate bundles a backup application, cloud storage (200GB of OneDrive for two years) and the Lyve photo management app along with their DAS units. Western Digital also adopts a similar value-add strategy. We have the WD Backup application that can help keep a continuous backup of certain folders in a PC on the DAS unit.

Western Digital also includes a utility program and a security configuration program. The utility helps the users to run disk checks, configure the drive spin down time interval, turn off the LED (for the My Passport model) and secure erase the drive. The security program allows users to set a password for accessing the drive, with the option to unlock the drive for the current Windows account and do related management tasks.

Note that this password activates the AES-256 hardware encryption block on the drive (the encryption is in the drive, rather than the USB bridge chip) for both models. We ran CrystalDiskMark with an encrypted drive and found that there was no performance loss due to the activation of the security features.

Coming to the business end of the review, the new My Book 8TB model retains the price of the earlier model - $250. This is much cheaper than the $349 of the Seagate Innov8, but priced around $35 more than the Seagate Backup Plus 8TB that comes with 200GB of cloud storage for two years. However, to WD's advantage, it does sport a helium drive with consistent performance compared to the Archive HDD used in the offerings from Seagate. The My Passport 4TB pricing follows a similar trend. At $139, it is around $20 more than the Seagate Backup Plus Portable 4TB drive which comes with 200GB of cloud storage for two years. This drive is PMR-based and (Update - 10/21/2016: The ST4000LM016 uses platters that operate partly in PMR mode and partly in SMR, along with multi-tier caching (MTC) which includes DRAM and flash - The efficiency of MTC ensures that an empty drive maintains as much consistency as a PMR drive even under heavy traffic.) offers performance similar to the My Passport 4TB. That said, both the My Book 8TB and the My Passport 4TB offers hardware encryption, which might be worth the premium over 200GB of cloud storage for two years offered by the Seagate models for some users. Other than these aspects, there is little to differentiate the products from Seagate and Western Digital in this space. Consumers can choose either vendor / model depending on their requirements.

 
Thermal Aspects and Power Consumption
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  • Samus - Monday, October 17, 2016 - link

    I appreciated Ganesh pointing that out too. Photos next round Ganesh? Also perhaps check if the 3.5" variant can be used internally on an AHCI SATA controller.
  • azrael- - Monday, October 17, 2016 - link

    Hmm... I find the new enclosures more clunky. At least the My Passport 2.5" one. Only upside I see is that they are somewhat more stackable. Not sure that's the intention, though.
  • coburn_c - Tuesday, October 18, 2016 - link

    Adding my two cents. WDC 2.5" drives are utter garbage. Seagate 7200 3TB+ models, especially the Chinese manufactured models are utter garbage. The rest is a lottery.
  • leo321 - Wednesday, July 25, 2018 - link

    When it comes to external hard disk, I always choose western digital. I find the performance better and is compatible with most of the popular platforms. Though I have faced a lot of data loss issue from my HDD. This is very common anyway. I use a Dell laptop. Having installed a <a href="https://www.f2help.com/">Laptop data recovery tool </a> or a software is necessary. HDD is used for backup but users need to think of restoring too.
  • sp00n82 - Saturday, July 20, 2019 - link

    Interestingly, when I used a frequency analyzer app on my mobile to measure the Hertz value for my WD My Book 8 TB (WDC WD80EZAZ-11TDBA0 according to CrystalDiskInfo) it returned a value of 120 Hertz. Which points to a rotation speed of 7200 rpm (7200 rotations per minute / 60 = 120 rotations per second = 120 Hertz).

    Other 5400 rpm drives show a value of the expected 90 Hertz, which indicate that they indeed rotate with "true" 5400 rpm.
    CrystalDiskInfo also shows a rotation speed of 5400 rpm for the My Book in its info, but somehow this doesn't seem to be the case.

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