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147.117.750₫
Solid performance and reliability for everyday computing
Massive capacity, Slim design
Height: 7.00mm
var wcCpi = ‘N82E16822236240’;
| Brand | Western Digital |
|---|---|
| Series | Scorpio Blue |
| Model | WD5000LPVT |
| Packaging | Bare Drive |
| Interface Interface | SATA 3.0Gb/s |
|---|---|
| Capacity | 500GB |
| Cache Cache | 8MB |
| RPM RPM | 5400 RPM |
| Features | Massive capacity
Low power consumption Ultra cool and quiet Designed for various applications Reliable Rugged Tested for compatibility Advanced Format (AF) |
|---|---|
| Usage | For Daily Computing |
| Form Factor Form Factor | 2.5″ |
|---|---|
| Height (maximum) | 6.8mm |
| Width (maximum) | 69.85mm |
| Length (maximum) | 100.2mm |
| Date First Available | March 22, 2021 |
|---|
Pros: Quiet, fast, low power. Basically better in every spec than the two-platter, 9mm, 500GB Scorpio Blue. Low profile is probably a plus, but didn’t matter for my Mac.
Cons: Clunk, clunk, clunk. The spindown time defaults to around 1 second. OS X does not reset it when you tell it not to spin down the drives when idle. Search “hdapm” for the fix. Linux has this built in (hdparm?).
Pros: Was a large drive and thin
Cons: Unit has excessive bad sectors, not worth the money
Pros: GOOD BRAND
Cons: IT ONLY LASTED A 2 MONTHS
How to get an RMA (Return Merchandise Authorization) or replace a defective product under warranty
http://wdc.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/8
Please contact us at 1 (800) 275-4932, or via our support website at: http://support.wdc.com/rs/ for any questions you may have.
Pros: Not DOA. Installing Win7 as we speak. Seems very quite for such a small drive with little mass (sound insulation). A few clicks as it writes.
Cons: The negative feedback from some makes you leery about buying the product. After reading the comments about head parking, you wonder why Tomshardware didn’t have the same problems.
Overall Review: Very well packaged. The person who put this item in the box must really care what they are doing. Drive was in its antistatic bag inside a special hard drive airbag. I was impressed.
Pros: Not a bad price for 500gb capacity and it works well.
Cons: Drive a little slow, but not to bad for 8MB Cache
Overall Review: none
Pros: I bought this drive to upgrade a laptop I recently acquired. This drive installed effortlessly and allowed an uneventful installation of Windows 7 Pro. Even though it is only a 5400 RPM drive, for the applications I use on it the speed is impressive. I will probably buy another one for a notebook upgrade I’m doing soon.
Cons: None so far.
Pros: It works, which is more than I can say for the junk drive that came with my new laptop.
Cons: None so far.
var wcCpi = ‘N82E16822236240’;
| Brand | Western Digital |
|---|---|
| Series | Scorpio Blue |
| Model | WD5000LPVT |
| Packaging | Bare Drive |
| Interface Interface | SATA 3.0Gb/s |
|---|---|
| Capacity | 500GB |
| Cache Cache | 8MB |
| RPM RPM | 5400 RPM |
| Features | Massive capacity
Low power consumption Ultra cool and quiet Designed for various applications Reliable Rugged Tested for compatibility Advanced Format (AF) |
|---|---|
| Usage | For Daily Computing |
| Form Factor Form Factor | 2.5″ |
|---|---|
| Height (maximum) | 6.8mm |
| Width (maximum) | 69.85mm |
| Length (maximum) | 100.2mm |
| Date First Available | March 22, 2021 |
|---|
Pros: It works and it’s cheap. For the price, capacity, and the physical format (7 mm thick) it’s a pretty good deal. There is a single, important caveat however.
Cons: The Intellipark “feature” that this drive comes with causes the drive to spin down every 4 seconds. This means that the GUI hangs, videos stutter, music skips. Every 4 seconds, like clockwork. Just imagine that for a second…. borderline unusable.
This affected debian, ubuntu, and Mac OS X. The problem manifested as a loud periodic clicking noise every 4 seconds, followed by extremely high latency (~800 ms) as the drive spins back up. Not only was this somewhat irritating, but I suspect it caused greatly increased power consumption and would have shortened the life of the drive dramatically (mechanical wear and tear).
I managed to disable it, with a somewhat sketchy utility supplied by WD, that only runs in DOS. I mean, I eventually got it working, but only after spending 2-3 hours of my time on this problem. If you buy this drive, you should factor that into your decision.
In the future, I’m probably more inclined to get a drive without this type of power management. The problem essentially is, if the operating system can’t coordinate power management with the HDD firmware, you’re likely to end up with poor results. I mean, if the OS thinks that it’s a good idea to spin down, then it probably is. On the other hand, the firmware on the HDD has no idea what demands are coming down the line. The only possible thing it can do, is spin down after a set period of inactivity, which is bound to yield poor results.
Overall Review: I understand where WD is coming from here. They’re trying to make the drive nominally more efficient. However, the way they’re going about it, by enabling overly aggressive power management on the firmware level, gives me the impression that Western Digital is trying to inflate their efficiency figures, at the expense of usability.
Pros: Quiet, fast, low power. Basically better in every spec than the two-platter, 9mm, 500GB Scorpio Blue. Low profile is probably a plus, but didn’t matter for my Mac.
Cons: Clunk, clunk, clunk. The spindown time defaults to around 1 second. OS X does not reset it when you tell it not to spin down the drives when idle. Search “hdapm” for the fix. Linux has this built in (hdparm?).
Pros: Was a large drive and thin
Cons: Unit has excessive bad sectors, not worth the money
Pros: GOOD BRAND
Cons: IT ONLY LASTED A 2 MONTHS
How to get an RMA (Return Merchandise Authorization) or replace a defective product under warranty
http://wdc.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/8
Please contact us at 1 (800) 275-4932, or via our support website at: http://support.wdc.com/rs/ for any questions you may have.
Pros: Not DOA. Installing Win7 as we speak. Seems very quite for such a small drive with little mass (sound insulation). A few clicks as it writes.
Cons: The negative feedback from some makes you leery about buying the product. After reading the comments about head parking, you wonder why Tomshardware didn’t have the same problems.
Overall Review: Very well packaged. The person who put this item in the box must really care what they are doing. Drive was in its antistatic bag inside a special hard drive airbag. I was impressed.
Pros: Not a bad price for 500gb capacity and it works well.
Cons: Drive a little slow, but not to bad for 8MB Cache
Overall Review: none
Pros: I bought this drive to upgrade a laptop I recently acquired. This drive installed effortlessly and allowed an uneventful installation of Windows 7 Pro. Even though it is only a 5400 RPM drive, for the applications I use on it the speed is impressive. I will probably buy another one for a notebook upgrade I’m doing soon.
Cons: None so far.
Pros: It works, which is more than I can say for the junk drive that came with my new laptop.
Cons: None so far.
Pros: It works and it’s cheap. For the price, capacity, and the physical format (7 mm thick) it’s a pretty good deal. There is a single, important caveat however.
Cons: The Intellipark “feature” that this drive comes with causes the drive to spin down every 4 seconds. This means that the GUI hangs, videos stutter, music skips. Every 4 seconds, like clockwork. Just imagine that for a second…. borderline unusable.
This affected debian, ubuntu, and Mac OS X. The problem manifested as a loud periodic clicking noise every 4 seconds, followed by extremely high latency (~800 ms) as the drive spins back up. Not only was this somewhat irritating, but I suspect it caused greatly increased power consumption and would have shortened the life of the drive dramatically (mechanical wear and tear).
I managed to disable it, with a somewhat sketchy utility supplied by WD, that only runs in DOS. I mean, I eventually got it working, but only after spending 2-3 hours of my time on this problem. If you buy this drive, you should factor that into your decision.
In the future, I’m probably more inclined to get a drive without this type of power management. The problem essentially is, if the operating system can’t coordinate power management with the HDD firmware, you’re likely to end up with poor results. I mean, if the OS thinks that it’s a good idea to spin down, then it probably is. On the other hand, the firmware on the HDD has no idea what demands are coming down the line. The only possible thing it can do, is spin down after a set period of inactivity, which is bound to yield poor results.
Overall Review: I understand where WD is coming from here. They’re trying to make the drive nominally more efficient. However, the way they’re going about it, by enabling overly aggressive power management on the firmware level, gives me the impression that Western Digital is trying to inflate their efficiency figures, at the expense of usability.