11-26-2010 10:42 AM - edited 11-27-2010 06:56 AM
I just bought a new Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex DESK 2TB external HDD @ BestBuy on Black Friday (2010) for 89.99 + tax.
Up until now... I have read the Desk versions had the faulty [ST32000542AS] Barracuda LP 2TB drives.
I had the CC35 update ready (expecting this HDD)... but here's the catch.
When I ran the HDD Sentinel program to inspect my Desk HDD I bought (right out of the box)... this is what came up:
- Drive == Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex Drive
- Size == 1.91 TB
- Usable Size == 1.82 TB
- Format == NTFS
- Model == ST2000DL001
- P/N == 9VT156
- Firmware == CC95
- Bytes/Sector == 4096 ... (4k Advanced Format ... not standard 512)
- Disk RPM == 5900 rpm
Apparently, it's a completely different drive... I THINK this is the Barracuda GREEN drive (not LP) ... but here's another problem...
The HDDs listed on the Seagate Barracuda Green drives are the [ST2000DL003] drives... not [ST2000DL001].
I thought this was an error... but there are some [001] drives being sold on the internet.
Also, the [003] drives have SATA-3 [6GB/s] speeds... and the [001] seems to only support SATA-2 [3GB/s].
Could any Moderator / Technician please give me some detailed specs (PDF file) on the [ST2000DL001] drive?
I cannot find it anywhere on the internet / Seagate tech pages.
These are the specifics I'm looking for:
#1) Does this HDD support SATA-3 [6GB/s] ... or is it a SATA-2 [3GB/s] ?
#2) What is the internal Cache amount for this HDD ?
#3) Is this HDD considered a Barracuda GREEN ... or Barracuda LP drive ... or other ?
#4) Is there a NEWER firmware update [post CC95] for this HDD ?
#5) I noticed this HDD is the 4k Advanced Format version (not standard 512)... and I am running Windows XP (Pro) SP-3.
Does this HDD have a jumper pin installed to "fool" the HDD and keep it a single large partition to bypass the 4k Advanced Sector tables?
I cannot open this external casing without VOIDing my FreeAgent warranty to check and see.
This is something I am very worried about, because I do not want to run this HDD with SATA-1 speeds using a USB 3.0 adapter.
Thanks in advance.
11-26-2010 01:33 PM
11-26-2010 02:18 PM
11-26-2010 04:51 PM
Roger, test it with Seatools, if you look in another thread I've posted about a fixed Maxtor 500 you'll see that Sentinal has reported faults that aren't on my drives, use the proper proggy and see what that says.
11-26-2010 04:57 PM - edited 11-27-2010 06:51 AM
Thanks for the replies.
I already read the manuals in detail... which is why I was posting... where is the [ST2000DL001] manual at.
Quote by "fzabkar":
Section 2.1 of the Green product manual states that the I/O data-transfer rate for the ST2000DL003 is 300MB/s, which makes it a SATA-2 drive.
Well, this isn't good... because we now have conflicting information about the ST2000DL003 GREEN drive. This PDF file (Nov, 2010) states otherwise:
http://www.seagate.com/docs/pdf/datasheet/disc/ds1
Both files are from Nov, 2010... but there are several discrepencies between the two:
- Interface speeds differ between ... SATA-2 [3GB/s] vs. SATA-3 [6GB/s]
- HDD Length differ between ... 146.99mm vs. 146.00mm
- Power On to Ready differ between ... 15-sec vs 10-sec.
- Warranty also differers between ... Check w/ Supports vs. 3-years
Those differences aren't that big of a deal (except the Warranty & Interface)... but worth a heads up.
Quote by "fzabkar":
CrystalDiskInfo displayed the 512-byte data block returned by the drive in response to an ATA Identify Device command. This data block should include the interface specs. See section 7.18.4 (word 76) of the following document.
Working Draft ATA/ATAPI Command Set - 2 (ACS-2):
Thanks for the link.
The table(s) are on p132 of that PDF file, in case someone else decides to look this up...
For me, that has no real use... because I don't know how to send the command line to the HDD for data retrieval. If I knew that, I might be able to code it up... but why bother when there are many softwares already out there that analyzes the data for me. ![]()
11-26-2010 05:05 PM - edited 11-27-2010 06:51 AM
Quote by "Cantbecanit":
Roger, test it with Seatools, if you look in another thread I've posted about a fixed Maxtor 500 you'll see that Sentinal has reported faults that aren't on my drives, use the proper proggy and see what that says.
Thanks... let me DL and run the program.
I'll get back to you here in about 30-min.
11-26-2010 06:05 PM - edited 11-27-2010 06:54 AM
Okay... here are the results from SeaTools:
Date: 11/26/2010 @ 8:12:30 PM
Unit Serial: NA0JAVKW
Unit Model: Seagate FA GoFlex Desk
Model: ST2000DL001 - 9VT156
P/N: 9VT156
Serial Number: 5YD07L0Q
Firmware Revision: CC95
Cache Size: 32 MB
SMART: Supported and enabled
48-bit Address Support: True
Max LBA: 3907029169
Host Protected Area features: Supported and enabled
Mandatory Power Management: Supported and enabled
Security Mode: Supported not enabled
SET MAX security extension: Supported not enabled
Advanced Power Managment: Not Supported
Download Firmware: False
SMART self-test supported: True
SMART error logging supported: True
Current Drive Temp (C/F): 26c / 79f
Power-On Hours (Total): 2 hours
--------------------------------------------------
Now... here are the results for Hard Disk Sentinel:
Interface: SAT Standard USB/ATA
Vendor Info: VID: 0BC2, PID: 50A1
Manufacturer: Seagate
HDD Model ID: ST2000DL001 - 9VT156
Firmware Revision: CC95
HDD SNN: 5YD07L0Q
Total Size: 1907726 MB ... (1.907 TB)
Usable Size: 1.86 TB
Logical Drive: FreeAgent GoFlex Drive
HDD Cylinders: 3876021
HDD Heads: 16
HDD Sectors: 63
ATA Revision: ATA8-ACS version 4
Transport Version: unknown [S1020]
Total Sectors: 488378646
Bytes Per Sector: 4096 [Advanced Format]
Multiple Sectors: 16
Error Correction Bytes: 4
Unformatted Cap: 1907729 MB
Max PIO Mode: 4
Max Multi-W DMA Mode: 2
Max UDMA Mode: 300 MB/s [6]
Active UDMA Mode 300 MB/s [6]
Min Multiword DMA Trans: 120 ns
Rec Multiword DMA Trans: 120 ns
Min PIO Trans w/o IORDY: 120 ns
Min PIO Trans w/ IORDY: 120 ns
Nominal System RPM: 5900 RPM
S-ATA Compliance: Yes
S-ATA I [1.5 GB/s]: Supported
S-ATA II [3.0 GB/s]: Supported
S-ATA III [6.0 GB/s]: Not Supported
Power Mng't from Host: Not Supported
PHY Event Counters: Supported
Non-Zero Buffer DMA Offset: Not Supported
DMA Auto Activation: Not Supported
Boot Interface Power Mng't: Supported
In-Order Data Delivery: Not Supported
Asynchronous Notification: Not Supported
Software Setting Prevention: Supported / Enabled
NCQ: Not Supported ... !!!!!
Queue Length: Not Supported
The Following Are Supported:
- Read Ahead Buffer
- DMA / UDMA
- SMART
- Power Management
- Write Cache
- Host Protected Area
- 48-bit LBA Addressing
- Device Configuration Overlay
- IORDY Support
- 64-bit World Wide ID: 005000C5B329E6C4
- General Purpose Logging
- Error Logging
- Long Physical Sectors [8]
The Following Are NOT Supported:
- Power Up In StandBy
- Read/Write DMA Queue
- NOP Command
- Trusted Computing
- Streaming
- Media Card Pass Through
- CFA Feature Set
- FCast Device
- Long Logical Sectors
- Read/Write Verify
- NV Cache Feature
- NV Cache Power Mode
- NV Cache Size
- Free-fall Control
- Free-fall Control Sensitivity
--------------------------------------------------
Well... I think that's about it for HDD data.
I was digging around a little more about this HDD ... it appears there are my Firmware versions of this HDD:
CC93 // CC95 // CC96
Also, the HDD [ST2000DL001] appears to be a Seagate Barracuda LP series HDD... not the newer GREEN series.

Again... there is VERY little information about this HDD on the internet.
I hope someone from Tech can give more details about this drive...
11-26-2010 09:02 PM
11-26-2010 11:19 PM - edited 11-26-2010 11:36 PM
Quote by "fzabkar":
"If your external drive is preformatted at the factory, then I'm betting that it is already 4KB aligned. You can confirm this with Microsoft's Sector Inspector:"
I cannot run the MSSI program to analyze my external HDD... the program only read my local HDD... even when launched from inside my external HDD directory.
Also, the program analyzes my local HDD as 1 unit... ignoring the multiple partitions.
"pre-formatted ... already 4KB aligned" ?
The HDD is 4KB (sector) size by default... not because of the NTFS (cluster) formating... but because that's how the newer HDDs are hard coded on the media layer/protocol.
Older HDDs are 512B (sector) size by default... in which the NTFS (cluster) format groups them into 4K clusters.
Another big difference between the 2 HDDs:
Older (512) starts writing Data on LBA 63
Newer (4k) starts writing Data on LBA 64
Since Windows XP "assumes" all HDDs are still 512B sector sizes... it starts writing data on LBA 63... which causes mis-alignment on the newer HDDs.
This results in VERY slow disk performances... like 2-5 MB/s speeds... rather than 30+.
That's why Windows XP users need to stay away from 1TB+ HDDs.
(I knowingly entered this troubling situation... no other option.)
------------------------------
Quote by "fzabkar":
"I have no idea how SmartAlign works."
Both the Seagate and Western Digital "alignment" programs end up "shifting" all the data on the HDD 1 LBA down the sector list/stack.
IE... rather than having the data start on LBA 63 ... it MOVES all the data on the HDD so that it starts on LBA 64 (correct location).
Of course... since I have Windows XP ... I either have to:
a) Use a jumper pin on the HDD to alter the Boot sector and "skip" 1 LBA sector.
b) Use a program (Seagate in this case) to shift all the data on the HDD 1 LBA sector.
Option B is better... but is an ugly process (takes a long time... depending on how much data needs to be moved).
If the HDD is empty, or only contains the OS... the process will be very quick.
That's why I was asking the Seagate Mods/Technicians weather or not this HDD [ST2000DL001] has a Jumper pin to fool my OS (easy/auto fix).
If not... I have no other alternative but to do Option B to fix my problem.
For other people with:
Windows Vista SP1+ ... or ... Windows 7 ... or ... Mac OS-X
you don't have to worry about this stuff.
------------------------------
Quote by "fzabkar":
"After running SeaTools, you may also find a 5YD07L0Q.ATA file in your SeaTools folder. This 512-byte file will have your Identify Device data. If it exists, could you upload it to a file sharing service?"
Sorry, I don't have any .ATA files generated.
Also, SeaTools lists the external drive as "NA0JAVKW"... not "5YD07L0Q".
FYI ... I just looked at the bottom of my external 2TB just now...
P/N == 9ZQ2N2-500 2TB
S/N == NA0JAVKW
--------------------------------------------------
Question for the HDD Tech/Engineer people...
*** Using a 2TB HDD with Advanced Sector Format (4k ... not 512)
Q1) With Windows XP ... if I use the "alignment" program to "shift" my data to the correct sectors of this 2TB HDD ... will newer OSes (like Windows Vista / 7) read the data on this HDD correctly?
Q2) With Windows XP ... if I copy data to this HDD WITHOUT using the "alignment" program ... will the newer OSes read the data on this HDD correctly does to sector mis-alignment?
Q3) With Windows XP ... if I write data to this HDD (with & without re-alignment) ... move to a different PC ... then write new or overwrite existing data data to this HDD again (say with Windows 7) ... will it cause any data corruption?
Q4) What would happen in the reverse situation ... write data to external HDD from Windows Vista / 7 ... then read using Windows XP ... any corruption?
Q5) Are there any newer Firmware updates (currently CC95) for this HDD model ... [ST2000DL001] ?
Thanks.
11-27-2010 12:26 PM - edited 11-27-2010 02:35 PM
I just did some further reading today... and I found the answers to most of my questions:
Q1) With Windows XP ... if I use the "alignment" program to "shift" my data to the correct sectors of this 2TB HDD ... will newer OSes (like Windows Vista / 7) read the data on this HDD correctly?
If the newer Advanced Format (4k sector size) HDDs are already NTFS formated by the Factory (upon purchase)... there is no need to Re-Format / Re-Allign the drives at all.
The LBA already starts on #64, and everything is perfectly aligned.
Windows XP... and other OSes... can write/read data to the drive perfect fine without any slow downs / errors.
However... if you are using Windows XP... you can NOT re-PARTITION the drive... else you lose the proper alignments.
You CAN, however, re-FORMAT the drives without any issues (good to know).
Q2 / Q3 / Q4 ... already answered from the above statement.
--------------------------------------------------
Q5) Are there any newer Firmware updates (currently CC95) for this HDD model ... [ST2000DL001] ?
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