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June Hard Drive Price Guide - Page 2By SharkyExtreme.com Staff June 30, 2008Serial ATA and the SATA II/SATA 3.0 Gb/s interface is the present and future, and the latest hard drive models are certainly making use of the latest 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 750GB and 1TB monstrosities, along with the powerful Western Digital Raptor 10K RPM speed demons. As Serial ATA drives are a newer technology, these are decidedly high-end, usually sporting 16MB-32MB of cache and 7200 RPM speeds at the top of the scale. Our SATA hard drive price list features entries for drives, prices and price changes, and a column for $/GB (cost per GB). The situation is quite a bit different in the Serial ATA listings, and here the price decreases far outnumbered the increases. Eight SATA hard drives showed price drops of $10 or more, with the Hitachi Deskstar 7K1000 1TB (-$30), Western Digital RAID Ed2 GP 1TB (-$23) and Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 1TB (-$18) being the most significant. The largest price increase was only a $7 jump to the cost of a Western Digital Raptor X 150GB hard drive, and there were only four price increases of any kind. The overall chart prices moved in a more positive direction, and offered consumers an aggregate $190 drop.
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