Testseek.com have collected 65 expert reviews of the Western Digital 3.5 inch Black SATA600 WD-FZEX / WD-FZBX and the average rating is 81%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Western Digital 3.5 inch Black SATA600 WD-FZEX / WD-FZBX.
January 2015
(81%)
65 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: Mise à jour du 01/05/2013 : Ajout des Toshiba DT01ABA300 et WD Black WD3001FAEXMise à jour du 12/03/2014 : Ajout des Seagate NAS HDD ST3000VN000, WD Red WD30EFRX...
Abstract: In diesem Artikel haben wir die 6-TB-Festplatten der drei großen Hersteller im Test: Seagate, Toshiba und Western Digital haben uns Modelle ihrer Festplatten für NAS sowie für normale Desktop-PCs geschickt - und wir haben sie ausführlichen Tests unterzoge...
Abstract: Während der Siegeszug bei Enthusiasten um das Jahr 2008 eingesetzt hat, hielt die SSD in den darauffolgenden Jahren dank fallender Preise und größerer Kapazitäten bei weiteren Anwendergruppen und Geräteklassen Einzug. Heute gehört eine SSD in jedem Gamer-...
The WD Black 4TB Desktop Hard Drive (WD4003FZEX) offers some very impressive results in terms of performance without increasing the overall power consumption of the drive....
The second generation 4TB WD Black ushers in a new level of performance for consumer grade HDDs. This should allow gamers and creative professionals to achieve the performance and capacity they desire in one storage solution. ...
Published: 2018-04-11, Author: Tomas , review by: uk.hardware.info
Despite the fact that there are only three hard disk drive manufacturers left, you have a lot to choose from when you're looking for a new drive. It is not just about prices either. Though SSDs have outperformed hard drives for a long time now, there are...
We are starting this conclusion with the 6TB-drives. The Toshiba MD04ACA 6TB and X300 6TB offer good performance in this segment for a relatively low price, but are clearly audible with noise levels that are nearly at 40 dB(A) when idle. Nevertheless th...
Abstract: Now that the prices of SSDs have dropped to well below 50 cents per GB, we expect that only few Hardware.Info readers will still want to use a conventional hard drive as their primary storage device. We still can't quite live without them, however, beca...