- Seagate 750 GB Barracuda Enters The Big League
- 1.8" Hard Drives: Small is Beautiful
- Notebook Drives At Up To 160 GB Put Under the Microscope
- WD1500AD Raptor X-Tends Performance Lead
- Samsung Adds Capacity to Fast-and-Quiet T133 Series
- Seagate's Half-A-TeraByte Hard Drive Comes at a Price
- New Toshiba SATA Drives Lack Performance Increase
- Fast and Furious: New 7200 mobile drives from Hitachi And Seagate
- The WD Caviar SE16 400 GB Gets Ready to Face The World
- Round-Up: Comparison Testing of 22 Hard Disk Drives
- Very bad news for everyones own personal "precious"
- athlon 64 X2?
- How much POWER do *I* need?
- Beginner in Need of Advice
- Four year old case, need a new one [paying for help]
- Motherboard and Memory Recommendation
- Seagate 500 GB External Hard Drive Goes eSATA
- Help Me Build A Great Gaming System
- Asking for comments on a new system
- 3dsmax, Photoshop & NWN2 -- @$1000 rig
Conclusion
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Keywords: seagate, 500, gb, external, hard, drive, esata
Syndication:
Conclusion

The slow access times seem even stranger in light of the very high read/write transfer performance, but transfer rates are what's important in a drive like this. We wonder if perhaps a driver update might speed up the Promise eSATA300 TX2 card's access times with the eSATA drive. That's speculation, but what we are certain of is that Seagate's eSATA performs where it counts: quickly moving huge amounts of data to and from its platters.
The only other area of note would be the eSATA's inability to easily interface with multiple PCs, as mentioned above. This problem doesn't really lie with the eSATA drive itself, but the lack of external SATA ports on most available motherboards. Still, it would have been nice if Seagate had addressed this with a USB or Firewire port as a backup option.
But these issues are relatively minor. External SATA is a great idea, and we applaud Seagate's entry into this relatively new market. The ST3500601XS-RK is a solid product and we can recommend it highly to those who need fast, mobile data transfer.
Editor's Opinion
While the read access time is troubling, I don't believe the drive is responsible. It's likely a latency issue with the included eSATA card, and I don't think it would impact real world performance when you consider this drive's target market. In all likelihood, no one is going to run any software from these drives - read/write performance is what matters, and for that task, Seagate's eSATA has nothing to apologize for.
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