SATA Hard Drives

  • SATA Hard Drives (60)
  • Tests (319)
  • sort by:
  • Popularity
  • The popularity if a product is calculated using:
    • how many people viewing it on otest.co.uk
    • number of reviews
    • sales ranking
    • age of product
  • | Overall score
  • | Price
  • | Name
 
  • Filtered by:
  • SATA 
 
  Capacity: 750GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 01/2008

 
  Capacity: 1000GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 01/2008

 
  Capacity: 1024GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
2 reviews, listed since 01/2008

 
  Capacity: 500GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 05/2008

 
  Capacity: 500GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 01/2008

 
  Capacity: 1024GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
2 reviews, listed since 12/2007

 
  Capacity: 640GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 07/2008

 
  Capacity: 320GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 05/2007

 
  Capacity: 500GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
4 reviews, listed since 01/2007

 
  Capacity: 320GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 03/2008

 
  Capacity: 250GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 07/2007

 
  Hard Drive
4 reviews, listed since 02/2007

 
  Capacity: 750GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
3 reviews, listed since 06/2006

 
  Capacity: 1000GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 04/2008

 
  Capacity: 750GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
2 reviews, listed since 07/2007

 
  Capacity: 1024GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
6 reviews, listed since 05/2007

 
  Capacity: 80GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Solid State Drive (MLC)
1 review, listed since 09/2008

 
  Capacity: 320GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 03/2007

 
  Capacity: 750GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 01/2007

 
  Capacity: 400GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 11/2008

 
  Capacity: 320GB; Connection: SATA; Type: Internal
1 review, listed since 03/2007

 
Reviews on SATA Hard Drives

"Hard disks: Value drives"

PC Pro
Issue: 8/2008
On test: Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD6400AAKS (640GB), Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD5000AAKS (500GB), Samsung SpinPoint F1 DT HD502IJ (500GB), Seagate Maxtor Diamond Max 22 STM3500320AS (500GB)
It is now possible to get massive hard drives much cheaper than would have been imaginable only a few years ago. These eight drives all offer capacities over 500GB with prices prices starting at under £50, perfect for people building their own PC on a budget.    More

"OCZ 64GB SATA II SSD"

TrustedReviews
Published on: 5/2008
On test: OCZ 64GB SATA II SSD
Could this new product from gamers-favourite OCZ take Solid State Drives to a whole new level?    More

"Four 1TB hard drives on test"

RegHardware
Published on: 3/2008
On test: Western Digital WD1000FYPS RE2-GP (1TB), Samsung SpinPoint F1 HD103UJ (1TB), Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 1TB (ST31000340AS), Hitachi Deskstar 7K1000 HDS721010KLA330 (1TB)
Hitachi was the first hard drive company to offer a 1TB model. We got our hands on the 7K1000 and were thoroughly impressed. Since then the other drive companies have piled into the Terabyte market, so it's time to see how they compare.    More

"Western Digital Scorpio 320GB hard drive review"

PC Advisor
Published on: 2/2008
On test: Western Digital Scorpio 320GB 2.5in SATA Hard Drive (WD3200BEVT )
The Western Digital Scorpio is less than 1cm thick and its 2.5in form factor allows it to slot into any notebook that has a Serial ATA hard drive connection. Alternatively, you could also use the Western Digital Scorpio with an external hard drive case, for a compact, but highly portablestorage solution for files that you just couldn't fit on to a thumb drive.    More
 

SATA Hard Drives

Serial ATA is a development of the IDE/ATA technology which, up till now, has been the standard method to connect drives to a computer. The previous standard has now been renamed Parallel ATA to differentiate from new devices and is being phased out by motherboard manufacturers as a technology for hard drives. Previous PATA buses could support two channels per port, SATA can only support one, but as hard drives have increased in size and many people are opting for smaller form factor computers that can only accept one hard drive and one optical drive anyway, there is no need for any more devices. Adding more ports however, is very cheap for manufacturers. SATA speeds are currently much faster than PATA, they still do not reach the speed of modern SCSI devices but that technology is little used in home computers nowadays. SATA currently represents the current standard for storage device interconnect and will do so for the foreseeable future, make sure any new motherboard you buy supports it.
This category contains tests on Hard Disk SATA, Hard Disks SATA.