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March Hard Drive Price Guide - Page 2By SharkyExtreme.com Staff March 28, 2007Serial ATA may be the interface of today, but SATA II/SATA 3.0 Gb/s is the future, and the latest hard drive models are certainly making use of the new standard. Features such as NCQ and a higher overall data bandwidth really help take some SATA drives to a higher performance plane. For our selected brands and sizes, we've gone the same route as with our PATA list, and included everything from a standard 80GB model, to the top-of-the-line 500GB and 750GB monstrosities, along with the powerful WD Raptor 10K RPM speed demons. As Serial ATA drives are a newer technology, these are decidedly high-end, even at the entry-level, sporting 8MB of cache and 7200 RPM speeds as the base minimum. Our SATA hard drive price list features entries for drives, prices and price changes, and columns for $/GB (cost per GB) and model number. The overall trends were much the same in the Serial ATA hard drive chart, but the price drops were more numerous and uniform. There were nine double-digit price cuts, but the largest was only $31. The biggest drops affected the Maxtor DiamondMax 11 400GB (-$31), Samsung SpinPoint T166 320GB (-$30), Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB (-$30), and Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 500GB (-$26) hard drives. The price increases were nominal, and included only three that reached double-digits, with the largest being $15. The aggregate chart movement for March mimicked this, and registered an overall drop of $215, just $3 more than the PATA listings.
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