Hi there,
Let me start with a few specs:
Cardbus runs at a maximum speed of 133Megabytes/sec.
FireWire800 runs at a maximum speed of 100Megabytes/sec.
SATA runs at a maximum speed of 150Megabytes/sec.
PATA runs at a maximum speed of 133Megabytes/sec.
Any FireWire external drive will have to go through another interface
at some point, either SATA or PATA. A cardbus to SATA adapter, if it
existed, would be limited to the Cardbus' speed. This would be further
reduced by overhead for each of the two standards, so that in reality,
a Cardbus-connected SATA drive would end up being barely faster then a
FireWire800 connected PATA drive.
Most important out of all of this, I would say, is that the vast
majority of hard drives only approach SATA speeds in very rare cases.
If you check out storagereview.com , you can see that even the fastest
non-SCSI drive, the Raptor, only manages a sustained tranfer rate of
72-55 MegaBytes/sec. The next drive down, the Maxtor MaxLine III, only
manages 65-37 MegaBytes/sec.
As such, I would recommend looking at the quality of enclosures, and
the drives themselves, rather than being too concerned about the
interfaces they are using slowing you down.
Now, all that being said, SATA-II is supposed to include support for
external applications, and Cardbus is being replaced by ExpressCard in
the near future.
SATA-II goes up to 300 MegaBytes/sec, and ExpressCard I believe is
312. Of course, even though that combo could double current interface
speeds, it would still be the drives themselves that were lagging
behind.
I'm in a similar position as yourself, not wanting to use my laptop
drive as main storage, so I hope you find a nice drive.
Passive |
Clarification of Answer by
passive-ga
on
19 Oct 2004 10:18 PDT
Hi again,
Both SATA and PATA are faster then FireWire800, so there should be
little difference between them. So it doesn't matter which one you
choose. I would still choose SATA if the price is the same, but there
is no need to pay a premium for it.
The external HD you posted is an external laptop HD, and runs at 5400
RPM, so is likely to be significantly slower than some of the HDs I
mentioned in the original answer.
I will address your options, as I see them:
If you want an external HD on it's own, Lacie makes a line of
FireWire800 external HDs.
http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?id=10029
There are other manufacturers as well, but Lacie has a good reputation.
If you want an external enclosure, with a standard HD inside it, the
following companies (and others) make FireWire800 enclosures:
OrangeMicro: http://www.orangemicro.com/fw800usb20hd.html
StarTech: http://www.startech.com/ststore/itemdetail.cfm?ProductID=IDECASEU2FB&topbar=topbara.htm
StarTech tends to be a lower end manufacturer, so I would look elsewhere first.
Then, with the second option, you will need a standard HD to go in the
enclosure. If you visit www.storagereview.com , they provide
information on all kinds of HDs, including speed, noise, and
reliability.
I hope this is a bit more specific, and helps you decide.
Take care,
Passive
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