Welcome to the Sharky Extreme Hard Drive Price Guide, which is a monthly feature that complements our CPU, Memory and Video Card prices guides. This will help provide a snap-shot of the overall market, and follows the same basic pattern as our weekly and monthly price guides. We'll start off with individual price lists for both Parallel and Serial ATA drives, and then by using various sorted lists, move into a more detailed look at overall value and pricing.
The hard drive price lists are not meant to duplicate the vendor selection of online price engines like PriceWatch or PriceGrabber, but instead will present an overview of the PATA and SATA hard drive marketplace. We have included a wide range of desktop hard drives from the most popular manufacturers, as well as ensuring an extensive selection of capacities and features.
* Please note that unless otherwise stated (using an Retail designation) the listed hard drives are OEM models.
* All listed hard drives are 7200 RPM, other than (as noted) the 10K WD Raptor models
The Parallel ATA hard drive selection rivals that of SATA, and the market is still quite strong. For standard desktop use, these range from basic 80GB models with 2-MB of cache, all the way up to a monster 500GB and 750GB drives with 8-MB and 16-MB of cache. These are the two extremes, and the most popular models strike a nice balance, usually sitting in the 250GB to 320GB range, and sporting 8MB of internal cache. We've got all the angles covered in our PATA hard drive price list, and along with the usual drive, price and price change columns, we've also included one for $/GB (cost per GB) and model number for easy look-up.
The last few months have not been kind to Parallel ATA hard drive prices, and we're still not seeing anything in the November chart to change that. There was only a single price drop that even approached double-digits, and that was only a $16 cut to the Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 750GB. The next largest decrease was $6 off the price of a Maxtor Ultra 16 300GB, and this was not enough to stem the tide of price increases. Two were significant, as the Western Digital Caviar SE 500GB and Western Digital Caviar SE16 500GB jumped by $27 and $18, respectively, which led to an overall chart increase of $54 - exactly the same as last month.