.
I've been doing a lot of looking for the past three months. Been reading a lot of forums and various vendor comments, including and especially newegg.
The only drives I will consider at this moment are Western Digital Black editions (at the cheapest end) for large, traditional 3.5" internal storage solutions. Until yesterday, these were the best bang per $$:
-
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136283 (SATA 3)
They went from $60 to $75 at midnight last night, free shipping. I'm really happy I bought two on Thursday for $120. Now, for another two days or so:
-
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136533are available for $80 each (SATA 6). I'm tempted to get one of these and place it into a USB 3 docking station ... just don't know if I can scrounge enough to swing it this week

support SATA 6:
-
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817193076 -
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817422031support SATA 1.5 & 3 (a SATA 6 drive needs to be jumper-crippled to work with SATA 3):
-
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817145078Anyway.
Based upon all the comments I've read, the
Samsungs Seagates have basically been horrible at 1TB and up for a large production run from end of last year through present. The number of DOAs is staggering, especially 1.5 and 2 TB sizes. And, that doesn't frighten me nearly as much as the number that die after 30 or 60 days ... just long enough to put them outside of RMA and also just long enough to actually fill them up with crucial data.
A number of people have posted about buying 4 or 8 drives to build RAIDs and then start seeing drive after drive self-destruct without much warning between 20 and 90 days. I've been seeing numbers like 2 out of 4 or 3 out of 8 arriving DOA, then having another 2 or three fail after three to six weeks of RMAs finally get all the drives running long enough to build RAID. Scary.
REALLY scary.
One consistent comment I've seen is that the China manufactured drives are failing at vastly higher rates than Malaysia manufactured. You don't know where yours is made 'til you receive it. I've seen several suggestions that if you get a China drive, immediately drop it a few times to make it a DOA, then RMA it until you get a Malaysia drive.
I've not seen very much better happiness out of any other brands right now,
except that Western Digital appears to currently have a pretty solid run in quality on their 500GB - 1TB drives, especially in their blue and black lines.
Other comment I take to heart: Western Digital has excellent free software on their website for owners of their products: Lifeguard and Acronis.
It has been urgently recommended that all new WD drives be burned in using Lifeguard ... fully write zero's across the drive ... before going to initialization and formatting via Acronis. I just spent a week moving data around all my old (PATA) drives, emptying them completely, running full tests, writing zeros and reformatting before putting them back into service.
I'm happy to say they all have passed tests without any serious issues and I feel much better. Some are three and four years old & I now have confidence they'll go another two or three.
I treat my gear with
r e s p e c t.
My new 750s should be here Monday and I intend to be REAL careful. Not gonna pop box seal and start filling them. There will be an aggressive burn in the first week before I begin to trust them with single copies of any files.
[
EDIT: My
apologies to Samsung ... I mis-typed the brand name. It's the
Seagate drives that I've been seeing an unusual spike in complaints about failure. ]