Product Details
Iomega 33748 USB 2.0 1TB 2HD x 500GB Desktop Hard Drive

Iomega 33748 USB 2.0 1TB 2HD x 500GB Desktop Hard Drive
From Iomega

List Price: $218.99
Price: $156.14 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

43 new or used available from $156.14

Average customer review:

Product Description

The Iomega Desktop Hard Drive, 1TB, Value Series (2 HDD x 500GB) provides a simple and affordable solution for all your storage needs. Ideal for adding capacity to your system, this plug and play drive delivers maximum performance. It's the easiest way to save photos, music, videos and more!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13389 in Consumer Electronics
  • Color: Silver
  • Brand: Iomega
  • Model: 33748
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 118.20" h x 66.00" w x 144.00" l, 6.00 pounds
  • Hard Disk: 1TB

Features

  • 1TB external hard drive with USB 2.0 connection
  • USB 2.0 offers up to 480 Mbps transfer rates
  • 7200 RPM and 8MB cache buffer for speedy performance
  • 1-year limited warranty
  • Device measures 4.75 x 2.75 x 9.5 inches (WxHxD)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Product Description
The Iomega Desktop Hard Drive 1TB provides an economical solution for even the greatest storage needs. The 1TB storage capacity allows you to save up to 4,000,000 photos, 18,500 hours of music, 1,500 hours of video and more. The volume is configured in a JBOD (Just a Bunch of Disks)
The Iomega Desktop Hard Drive 1TB offers:
  • A spacious 1TB storage capacity.
  • USB 2.0 interface for a fast and widely compatible connection.
  • FAT32 preformatting for added convenience.
configuration, which lets the drive appear on your computer as one large disk.



The whopping 1TB storage capacity can hold up to 4,000,000 photos. View larger.
The drive uses a USB 2.0 connection which is virtually universally compatible with all computers today and boasts transfer rates of up to 480 Mbps. The device houses two SATA hard drives with 7200 RPM speed and up to an 8 MB cache buffer for speedy performance.

The drive is compatible with both PCs and Macs. It is FAT32 preformatted so PC users can just plug it in and start using it. The Iomega Desktop Hard Drive 1TB is backed by a 1-year warranty.

What's in the Box
Iomega 1TB External Hard Drive, USB cable, power cable, and quick install guide.



Customer Reviews

Failed after a year1
Awful product. Was Blazing hot, I finally had another fan blowing on it, and then 1 year after purchase it died. Do not purchase.

Solid drive, gets very hot.4
I have been using this drive as a backup to my backup external hard drive. I work in video/photography, so I needed the ability to have everything filter into one, final backup device. This drive was the best price in the 1 TB market and at the time, had little reviews.

So far, it has worked flawlessly. It's sleek design looks good and contrary to what someone else said, it's far from being bulky. It's smaller than my temporary backup external drive that's only 250gb compared to this 1 TB.

As for noise, it's no louder than the hard drive you have inside your pc that is it's noise is suppressed by your computer case. Noise is nominal at best from this drive.

The only concern I have with this drive is that it gets extremely hot to the touch after being on a very short time. Granted, I don't keep it on more than an hour every day but when it comes time to turn it off, the top is very hot. I'm sure it's because Iomega crammed lots of storage capacity into a tightly packed area. Seems within operating range but be sure not to stack it somewhere that it can't receive adequate air circulation.

Remember, smaller is not always better...that was the fad a few years ago with everything and it just didn't work.

Good drive, lots of storage space, does generate a good bit of heat and noise level is nominal.

Iomega review, Three months later1
After considering all the user pros and cons of this device, I went ahead and purchased this drive back on June 25th, and its main purpose was to be the main back up for my digital video and music collections. I copied over 100GB of data that weekend and it went smoothly, but towards the end I noticed that the power light went off mid file copying and the drive disappeared. I chalked it up to over working the drive, rebooted, and continued on with it only happening one more time. My eyebrow was raised, but no worries as of yet.

In July/August, turning on the drive would often lead to the drive starting to spin, but the power light going out. Turn it off and back on and it happens again instantly. Three or four times later, it stays on. This happens more than I could stand, but I already had over 200 GB of data on the drive, so it's something I can deal with as long as my data is safe once it gets there.

Fast forward to September. I finally digitize the rest of my music collection and start to copy files to the external drive, and it continues to shut off mid file copying. When I first got it, I could copy a few gigabytes at a time, but now it's struggling with folders under 90MB. Not once or a handful a times...EVERY SINGLE TIME. This is insane. I want to be rid of this device, but it is well out of the 30 day warranty. But wait, there is hope: I found out that the external drive just might have a grudge against windows XP, because when I hook it up to my Vista powered laptop, I doesn't shut off at all! Even though it should work with all operating systems that it's compatible with, I brushed that aside...I have a new glimmer of hope! But I still have a majority of my files on the XP powered PC. So I reconnect it to my PC, although I haven't decided on which method I was going to use to move files from my PC to the laptop to the external drive. Well yesterday, the drive made that decision for me.

I turned it on, and the main video folder is corrupted. Drive capacity shows that the bytes are still counted as being there, but the folder shows 0 bytes, 0 data. I Run scan disk, no errors. Defrag won't work. After trying a few more things for an hour, and after considering all the hoops I'd have to jump through to try and recover the data, I said screw it and reformatted.

So my thoughts on this drive are pretty clear; it was a waste of my $200. Of course I have DVD backups of everything I copied to the drive, so I'm not too upset about losing the data. But the fact remains that it failed at being a reliable device which I could use to quickly upload files back to my PCs. I got this to last for a few years, but it didn't even make it a full three months. Now I'm left with a $200 brick that I wouldn't trust to hold a collection of text files.