That's it. I'm finished with Seagate. I said it after their "click of death" but I was foolishly tempted by the cheap prices on their newer Barracudas. Out of four drives over a year old, three have needed replacing under warranty, and now the final insult.
Having RMA'd a ST2000DM001 with 2 platters, they've sent me an older version with 3 platters, known to be slower, hotter, and use more power. They couldn't even replace like-for-like, they sent me the old-tech version and hope they can get away with it by using the same model number. Why are they even still making these things years after they trumpeted the new platter technology in their products?
Just like the monitor manufacturers that do the first run with a really good panel to get good reviews, then they change to a cheaper, inferior design to con the public and increase profit margins.
I've had a WD drive fail, but they've at least never pulled a bait & switch on me. No more Seagate ever.
Having RMA'd a ST2000DM001 with 2 platters, they've sent me an older version with 3 platters, known to be slower, hotter, and use more power. They couldn't even replace like-for-like, they sent me the old-tech version and hope they can get away with it by using the same model number. Why are they even still making these things years after they trumpeted the new platter technology in their products?
Just like the monitor manufacturers that do the first run with a really good panel to get good reviews, then they change to a cheaper, inferior design to con the public and increase profit margins.
I've had a WD drive fail, but they've at least never pulled a bait & switch on me. No more Seagate ever.
I've always used Western Digital and Samsung personally, though you'll find plenty of people who bash each also. That's the problem with mechanical HDD's, they're prone to failure, and so you'll always find people who have had failures. As you've correctly said however, WD don't mess around with the RMA, they're great with them (in my experience) 