Hitachi X750 Mobile 750 GB USB 2.0 Portable External Hard Drive 0S03061 (Black)
Hitachi X750 Mobile 750 GB USB 2.0 Portable External Hard Drive 0S03061 (Black)
Rating:
List Price: $ 104.08
best Price :$ 69.99
this best price old post please check price update(price will lower or up)
- Smooth, Textured Body for a Sure Grip On the Go
- 750GB Capacity
- 2.5-inch Portable External Hard Disk Drive
- Speedy USB 2.0 Cable Included
- No Power Cable Required
Agile. Ready to go the distance. With the dependable speed of USB 2.0. When you need pure storage muscle, choose a drive that’s ready to back up whatever you care about, wherever you need to be – with no power cable to tie you down. Backed by Hitachi’s reputation for quality, reliability and a worldrenowned R&D heritage for advanced hard disk drives used to store, preserve and manage the world’s most valued data.
List Price:$ 104.08
best Price :$ 69.99
this best price old post please check price update(price will lower or up)
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about 9 months ago
Cannot recommend these drives,
In my business, I need lots of portable storage. So I am always scanning for sales on large capacity 2.5″ external drives. Most of the time, I wind up buying 500GB external drives because they seem to go on sale more often. This time, however, I was able to buy the Hitachi X750 Mobile 750 GB USB 2.0 Portable External Hard Drive at an extremely attractive price. But like so many extremely attractive offers, the bargain may be too good to be true.
Good move. Hitachi drives are historically excellent and I don’t expect these to be anything less.
The design doesn’t exactly thrill me and the idea that the “ergonomic” styling adds any utility to the drive is, in my opinion, a bit far-fetched. But they are nice looking and something of a departure from the normal boxy external hard drive. The warranty on these units is short, only a year. I strongly suggest at least looking into extended warranties. It is my opinion that this kind of hard drive should carry a three-year warranty, but that is only my opinion.
I lowered my rating from five stars to three because of the warranty issue. I opened up the box of one these drives yesterday, plugged it in and heard some really major rattles. No way was I going to use that drive, which I had purchased in January, 2011. I checked Hitachi’s website to learn the return procedure and was shocked to learn that the warranty starts when the drive leaves the factory! Thus, my “one year warranty” expires in November – ten months after my purchase. I consider this to be a very consumer unfriendly policy and will hesitate to purchase Hitachi drives in the future.
The drives are literally silent. A pair of LEDs on the underside keep you informed as to drive activity. Read/Write speeds are par for the course.
Oddly, the drives come formatted with FAT32 which is increasingly archaic. I immediately reformatted them as NTFS.
Hitachi includes backup software on the hard drive out of the box, but I didn’t even bother with it.
Overall, shop carefully, find these on sale and enjoy the wonders of massive desk space. They’re also fine values at their everyday price as well.
04/20/2011
I’ve lowered my ranking of this drive to 1-star. The second of four the drives I purchased failed with the same symptom I described above, a very pronounced clicking. Could be a head crash. Point is that the odds of two drives of a batch of four failing with the same symptom are astronomically high. I understand Hitachi is in the process of selling its hard drive unit. Doesn’t matter: I will avoid this once fine brand in the future.
Jerry
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|about 9 months ago
Me too (clunk, clunk),
Got this for $60 at Fry’s now I think I know why it was so cheap. Just like JP I heard a clunk clunk when I plugged it in, it didn’t last and I foolishly ignored it and did a Windows backup to the disk (BTW they use FAT32 for Windows/Mac compatibility out of the box). That seemed to go okay.
Then the next day I went to plug the drive into my desktop and plug both USB connectors in and copy some music files onto it and walked away to do something else. Next thing I hear this spastic clunk, clunk, clunk from the drive that wont stop. I unplug it, try one connector and the drive isn’t recognized and doesn’t make a sound – although the superfluous super bright LEDs are on (maybe if they weren’t so bright it wouldn’t need an extra USB connector).
Anyway then I try it back on the laptop and it seems to work fine – no clicking. Then I try it on a MacBook Pro and it seemed okay. So I ran a disk check on it and although it says everything is okay I hear a couple more clunks.
Basically this disk is exhibiting the signs of every other disk I’ve heard that was about to fail so as soon as I can its going back to Fry’s and like others I’m trading out for a tried and trusted Seagate.
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|about 9 months ago
Two out of two deader than Elvis,
This HDD lasted about 4 months before it started making clunking sounds. Sounds no healthy HDD should ever make.
Got a RMA from Hitachi and sent it back, which I had to pay for.
Received the replacement drive today, after about a month. Plugged it in and this one make the noises right out of the box.
I’ll probably try the return process again as other I’ll have to eat the purchase price on this unusable hunk of plastic. Surely Hitachi can make a HDD that doesn’t fail. Maybe they will actually send me one.
BSW
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