CNET Editor's rating: 7.0 out of 10
Reviewed by
Dong Van Ngo
Review date: 06/15/06
Release date: 03/08/06
The good: The MyBook Premium edition is compact, employs an innovative design, has an external capacity gauge, comes with backup software, and is a speedy data reader.
The bad: The MyBook Premium edition is slow to write data, over both USB 2.0 and FireWire 400.
The bottom line: If write speed isn't a top priority, the Western Digital MyBook is a good deal at around $300 for a 500GB drive. It'll look good on your desk or bookshelf, too.
The Western Digital MyBook Premium Edition external hard drive is physically portable but still humongous in terms of capacity. The 500GB unit we tested offered the most mixed performance of any external hard drive we've tested. Though we love its design, capacity, and small size, we were a little disappointed with its overall performance. Direct competitors in this space include the Maxtor OneTouch III Basic (500GB), the Seagate Pushbutton Backup Drive (400GB), and the Iomega External Hard Drive (400GB). All these drives cost about the same, though the Iomega also offers FireWire 800 connections. All have backup software, as well. The Seagate drive was a slow performer, while the Iomega was speedy when transferring over FireWire but slow over USB 2.0.
Drive type: external hard disk drive
Available capacities: 160GB; 250GB; 320GB; 400GB; 500GB--all drives have a 7,200rpm hard disk drive
Capacity of test unit: 500GB
Cache: 16MB for the 400GB and 500GB drives; 8MB for the rest
Dimension: 6.8 x 5.6 x 2.2 (HLD in inches); 2.6 pounds
OSs supported: Windows 98 SE/Me/2000/XP or, Mac OS X 10.2.8+
Software included: EMC Retrospect Express Backup and System Recovery Software (on drive)
Additional features: capacity gauge: the backup button features an LED that indicates how much space is available on your drive; the drive turns itself off when not in use
Service/support: one-year warranty; toll-free phone support: 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. from Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Friday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. CT on Saturday; e-mail support via an online form; Web site has a searchable knowledge base, FAQs, downloadable drivers, and software.
On CNET Labs' test bench, the 500GB MyBook was very sluggish when writing, via both FireWire 400 and USB 2.0 connections. The drive took almost 36 minutes to write our 10GB test folder, about three times slower than other hard drives with the same specs. On the other hand, in the read test, the MyBook drive took slightly less than 10 minutes to get the job done, which was the fastest among all of the external hard drives we've tested.
The Western Digital MyBook comes in a very sleek design that is shaped like a medium-size book and weighs about the same. It features a button in front that activates the bundled Retrospect backup software. The coolest thing about the MyBook drive is that the button has a round, blue LED ring around it that indicates the amount of space available on the hard drive.
Intro:
This Western Digital My Book Premium Edition External Hard Drive is a 160GB, external hard disk drive.Compared to other external hard drives on the market, it is expensive at around $335.Can connect with both FireWire and USB 2.0 for increased portability.This is a 7200 rpm drive and comes with an 8MB cache.
Noteworthy Features:
Has a 160GB capacity.This is larger than the average hard drive on the market today, but is to be expected for a hard drive of this price.Connects to your PC via high speed USB 2.0 or FireWire cables.This product can also connect to older USB ports, but the transfer rates will be fairly slow.
Weaker Features:
None noted, given available product data.
Suitability:
Suited for those who don't want to take apart their computer to add another hard drive -- just plug it in.
Value:
In general, this hard drive's features are in line with its price.
1 out of 10 - Abysmal Problems you should know about
Well, the Western Digital My Book looks cool. Backing up to a USB/Firewire drive sounds like a good idea ...
Well, the Western Digital My Book looks cool. Backing up to a USB/Firewire drive sounds like a good idea and it is too. The problem with these is, they are known to have problems shutting off unexpectly, even during data copying which renders them unreliable and worse than useless. Take a tour of the Western Digital support forums and see for yourself. There are many users reporting that USB connected My Books do not operate reliably. I own the 160 GB drive and sure enough, I can't even backup my iTunes folder with a simply file copy operation in Windows XP because the drive shuts itself off before the copy (about 10 gigabytes worth) can complete. I tried searching the WD KB for ways to fix this. I tried turning off Legacy USB support. I made sure delayed writes were off (smart idea with these lemons) and no joy. The only cure now is going to be breaking open the case, removing the enclosed IDE drive and actually putting it into my system. So much for external backup drive. I thought you should know this if you are shopping for these. I now trust none of them. At least go and visit the support forums for hardware you plan to spend your hard earned money on, because those forums will tell you the ugly, not just the good and bad many reviews do. And in this case, the ugly is mighty ugly. I've used WD internal drives for many years and never had a problem until I bought this book which might as well be a book since its no hard drive that I can use as of now. And if you go to the support forums you will see, there IS NO FIX for this that WD offers. Be careful out there.
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by MikeLyons500 (see profile) -
October 24, 2006
5 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.
1 out of 10 - Abysmal I Wish I had Read the Reviews on This Thing
I wish I had read the previous two reviews... they were spot on regarding this product! I bought the 160GB ...
I wish I had read the previous two reviews... they were spot on regarding this product! I bought the 160GB model specifically for photo storage, and talk about slow! Also, it sat by my monitor and never moved, it was never handled... and it stopped working at 13 months... with a warranty of 12 months. Nothing but clicking, the apparent sign of a defective drive. Interesting though, it was purchased in Dec 2006, yet WDC stated that the warranty expired in April 2007. What? Also interesting that at both Best Buy and Staples I was warned to stay away from WDC products. Now I know why. I will never purchase another WDC product (knowingly) again.
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by jrbandjcb (see profile) -
February 19, 2008
1 out of 10 - Abysmal Buyer beware
Read MikeLyons500 as he speaks truth. I'm on my third My Book replacement with no hope of a refund. ...
Read MikeLyons500 as he speaks truth. I'm on my third My Book replacement with no hope of a refund. The first I sent back within a month of purchase for replacement (bad sectors diagnosed), the second two weeks after that (bad sectors, plus shutting down for no reason). WD upgraded my third replacement with a 400GB model, which is currently exhibiting the same intermittent shutdown problems. I will chalk this one up to experience and eat the $125 I spent, and avoid Western Digital. Buyer beware.
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by ielzco (see profile) -
June 15, 2007