Maxtor OneTouch II 200GB External Hard Drive
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Nicholas Hart
Kurtis
Maxtor
Jun. 24, 2005
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Testing
To test the Maxtor OneTouch II external drive, I hooked it up to my system via USB and ran a few benchmarks and copied a large amount of files while keeping track of time. The test system consists of a Pentium 4 2.8c Northwood CPU (800 MHz FSB), a DFI LanPary PRO875B motherboard, 2x256MB Micron CL3 DDR400 and 2x512MB Kingmax CL2.5 DDR400, Seagate 200GB ATA 7,200RPM 8MB hard drive and an up-to-date installation of Windows XP SP2. I used the following programs and methods to benchmark the performance of the OneTouch II drive:
HD Tach RW 3.0.1.0 DiskBench 2.4.3.1 Sandra Lite 2005.3.10.50 My own real-world copy test
HD Tach
HDTach 3 has been completely rewritten for Windows 2000 and XP and will test the sequential read, random access and interface burst speeds of almost any attached storage device. While HDTach's results should be fairly close to real-world usage, it is still a benchmarking program and may not exactly represent actual performance.
Performance on this test shows both drives pretty even. The Maxtor has a bit higher read performance average, but also uses a few more CPU cycles doing so. The Seagate drive has a quicker access time.
DiskBench
DiskBench basically copies a file from point A to point B and records how long it took. For our tests, we had the program copy a 500 MB file (in 10x50 MB blocks) from the hard drive to the Seagate Pushbutton drive and spit out the transfer speeds. Due to the nature of this program, these results should do an extremely good job of representing the actual performance of the drives.
DiskBench
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External Drive |
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Seagate 400GB Pushbutton
Maxtor 200GB OneTouch II
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minutes (lower is better)
3
Again, things are pretty much even with no noticeable difference in copy performance.
Sandra
Sandra is designed to test the theoretical performance of a computer's components. The results may not be representative of real-world performance.
Sandra
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External Drive |
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Seagate 400GB Pushbutton
Maxtor 200GB OneTouch II
Sandra shows both drives performing identically.
Real-World Copy Test
My copy test actually consisted of two parts. For the first, I copied 11.8GB of MP3 files from my system drive to the external hard drive. For the second, I copied the contents of my entire system, 86.9GB total, to each drive. I manually recorded the length of time it took to complete each transfer.
Real-World Copy Test
(Show All Graphs)
(Collapse Graphs)
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11.8 GB MP3s |
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86.9 GB System Copy |
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Seagate 400GB Pushbutton
Maxtor 200GB OneTouch II
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Minutes (lower is better)
120
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11.8 GB MP3s |
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86.9 GB System Copy |
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Seagate 400GB Pushbutton
Maxtor 200GB OneTouch II
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Minutes (lower is better)
120
So the copy test doesn't help any in distinguishing between the two drives. While the Maxtor performs the small copy set faster, it's slower on the large copy set. I guess I would call things even as the margins are pretty slim.
Noise is another big factor when considering a drive, especially one that is going to sit on the desk next to you. The Maxtor drive is silent during low speed transfers such as listening to music or watching a movie. During large transfers there is some occasional clicking but for the most part it is still silent.
I should probably mention dive temperature since I talked up the cooling capacity of the aluminum case. The drive casing does get warm, but I definitely wouldn't say it gets hot. Think of it as a good hand warmer for when you come in from the cold. I think the aluminum is doing a good job of cooling things and it's not warm enough to cause me to worry about the lifespan of the drive.
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I4U Aug. 24, 2008 - 2:46 am
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