TOSHIBA HDWU120: Difference between revisions
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|manufacturer = [[Toshiba]] | |manufacturer = [[Toshiba]] | ||
|family = [[Toshiba V300]] | |family = [[Toshiba V300]] | ||
|platform = | |platform = [[:Category:Hitachi ARM Mars-C|Mars-C]] | ||
|form_factor = 3.5" | |form_factor = 3.5" | ||
|z-height = 26.1 | |z-height = 26.1 | ||
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[[Category:Toshiba hard drive models]] | [[Category:Toshiba hard drive models]] | ||
[[Category:Toshiba V300]] | [[Category:Toshiba V300]] | ||
[[Category:Hitachi ARM Mars-C]] | |||
Revision as of 09:55, 15 March 2022
TOSHIBA HDWU120 was a hard drive model created by Toshiba. It is a rebadged TOSHIBA DT01ABA200V aimed at the retail sector, which is in turn a rebadged unreleased Hitachi drive. It is part of the Toshiba V300 series, designed to record, playback and edit video on a DVR, NVR or television; essentially, an entry level version of the Toshiba S300. It was discontinued in 2021, having been fully usurped by the S300 family.
SMART attributes
| ID | Name |
|---|---|
| 0x01/1 | Read Error Rate |
| 0x02/2 | Throughput Performance |
| 0x03/3 | Spin-Up Time |
| 0x04/4 | Start/Stop Count |
| 0x05/5 | Reallocated Sectors Count |
| 0x07/7 | Seek Error Rate |
| 0x08/8 | Seek Time Performance |
| 0x09/9 | Power-On Hours |
| 0x0A/10 | Spin Retry Count |
| 0x0C/12 | Power Cycle Count |
| 0xC0/192 | Power-off Retract Count |
| 0xC1/193 | Load/Unload Cycle Count |
| 0xC2/194 | Temperature |
| 0xC4/196 | Reallocation Event Count |
| 0xC5/197 | Current Pending Sector Count |
| 0xC6/198 | Uncorrectable Sector Count |
| 0xC7/199 | UltraDMA CRC Error Count |
Trivia
- The HDWU120 was the final Mars-C 2 TB 5,700 RPM drive retail model. Currently, Toshiba only offer two 5,400 RPM-class CMR retail models; the TOSHIBA HDWV110, also a Mars-C, and the TOSHIBA HDWT140, a Fujitsu HDA-using model codenamed Tomcat.
- The HDWU120, like most Hitachi desktop drive firmware (dating back all the way to the IBM Deathstar family), has a bugged Power-off Retract Count counter; it always matches Load/Unload Cycle Count, even if the hard drive has always been powered down normally.