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11.9
11

StarTech SAT3540ER 4-Bay Hard Drive Enclosure Review

by admin ·

4 stars

TYHI from US on Oct.302011

4out of 5

I’ve used the INFOSAFE SAT3540ER since 2008 starting with 250GB drives and upgrading to 1.5TB drives (going to try 2GB drives shortly even though I think it is only guaranteed to support 4x1TB drives…already surpassed that benchmark). It provides fairly quick access for archiving and backup of my data and as a media bay for my movies (my 3y/o loves movies but had a habit of irreparably scratching them when he would try to load one on his own thereby adding to our decorative coaster collection…problem solved). I’ve contacted their tech support once via email and received a quick and competent reply.

The fan on the unit is not noticeable when mounted on top of our media PC next to our TV. If you place it next to the desktop (homebuilt), you can hear it if you really concentrate on listening for it, though, usually the desktop fans drown out the noise on the SAT3540ER. On the other hand, I do find the fan on the power supply somewhat irritating when everything is off since it continues to run unless you switch off the outlet (solved this issue with a green power supply that shuts down all slave outlets when the computer shuts down).

Haven’t had any issues with drives burning out or failing so the case fan appears to be doing its job. I recently purchased another SAT3540ER to dissect from a user who sold it because of a failing case fan (actually, it appears to never have been cleaned and may be bogging it down). If all goes well, plan on seeing if I can upgrade the fan. Don’t really plan on using this one unless my other one fails. Maybe use as a spare parts bin since you can’t get spare parts or upgrades like the Burly Box (of course, it also costs less than half of what a Burly Box costs).

On a final note, you won’t be disappointed so long as you don’t think you are buying a Burly Box. It’s an economical and capable little cousin (a fairly distant cousin) to the Cadillac of enclosures.

Originally posted at Buzzillions.com (legalese)

StarTech SAT3540ER 4-Bay Hard Drive Enclosure
The InfoSafe 4 Drive External SATA (eSATA) Multi RAID hard drive enclosure provides robust functionality and configurability to create the ideal external RAID storage solution. Capable of housing up to four SATA removable hard drives at up to 1TB capacity per drive (for a total of up to four Teraby…

03.5
11

HP Pavilion p6720f

by admin ·

Amid competition from slim-tower PCs and all-in-ones, the tried-and-true midtower PC might seem like a dated platform. Still, we can’t help but have some appreciation for HP’s Pavilion p6720f. This $599 desktop has few feature highlights, but it’s a capable budget PC with an expandable base for a reasonable price.

HP’s Pavilion midtower design should feel familiar if you’ve gone PC shopping in the last few years. Its glossy black, gray-trimmed exterior conforms to apparent industry aesthetic standards, and although its outside is plastered with stickers, we’re more willing to forgive a midtower for that design offense. Unlike smaller slim-tower PCs, a standard midtower desktop isn’t that likely to wind up in your living room hardware stack.

The Gateway’s DX4840-03e and HP’s own Pavilion p6510y are two of the last midtowers we’ve reviewed, both from July 2010. Neither is available anymore, but they still provide relevant points of comparison for the Pavilion p6720f, in that they let us see how the value proposition has changed over the last nine months or so.

The differences between the two HP systems are more prominent than between the Pavilion p6720f and the Gateway. The newer HP unit boasts a faster, more advanced AMD quad-core CPU than the older one, as well as a larger hard drive, more RAM, and wireless networking. Granted, the newer model costs $70 more than the older one, but even taking that price jump into consideration, the newer Pavilion seems like a definite improvement.

The matchup with the Gateway model isn’t as black and white for the Pavilion p6720f. The two are more or less identical in terms of core features, although the Gateway offers more RAM and a dual-core Intel Core i3 chip with a faster core clock speed than the HP. The two models trade performance wins on our benchmark tests, making neither an obvious winner, but we’ll give HP credit for offering more expandability than the Gateway. The Pavilion gives you a free PCI Express graphics card slot, as well as three 1x PCIe slots for other card upgrades. The Gateway offers only a graphics slot and a single 1x PCIe input. Although free slots don’t translate to instantly usable out-of-the-box functionality, we’re willing to pay more for upgrade potential.

Cinebench
(Longer bars indicate better performance)

Rendering multiple CPUs  

Rendering single CPU  

We weren’t surprised by the Pavilion p6720f’s benchmark results given its quad-core AMD CPU. Though it drags behind the Asus and Gateway systems on clock-speed-focused tests, the newer HP handles multitasking and multicore-friendly apps well. With more and more programs like media creation apps, games, and even Windows 7 itself supporting multiple processor cores, you may see a noticeable benefit from a system like the HP with four CPU cores. Intel’s Sandy Bridge CPUs might upend the HP’s fast Phenom II X4 chip when they emerge in this price range, but for now, casual computer users should be satisfied with the Pavilion p6720f’s overall performance.

We mentioned the HP’s card expandability. We should add that if you want to upgrade to a discrete graphics card, the Pavilion’s 250-watt power supply will prevent you from adding anything beyond a lower midrange GPU. Other upgrade options include a spare RAM slot, as well as a free hard-drive bay, but, as usual with the midtower Pavilion, the clunky hard-drive cage makes adding a second storage device harder than it should be.

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