
- Choose the blazing speed of USB 2.0 or the ferocity of FireWire
- Rubber feet and detachable zinc alloy stand included for vertical or horizontal setup
- Hot-pluggable drive can be turned off when not in use to conserve electricity
- PushButton Backup lets you back up your important files simply by pushing a button
- 7200 RPM hard drive, 8 MB cache
Product Description
AcomData E5 External Hard Drives combine high-performance data storage with the stark beauty and efficiency of aluminum alloy enclosures. Featuring fanless, near-silent operation, these drives can be placed horizontally or vertically - and they're stackable. So, whether you have one drive or several, you'll need only the smallest patch of desktop real estate to store mountains of music, video and data.... More >>
AcomData 250GB E5 USB 2.0/FireWire External Hard Drive with PushButton Backup
October 13th, 2009 - 00:36
Guess I can join the club of failed acomdata drives – used this 250GB hard drive for backups only about every 3-4 weeks so only turned it on and used it 15 times max and now it is dead with nothing but clicking sound and Windows unable to recognize. Junk.
Rating: 1 / 5
October 13th, 2009 - 01:12
Worked great for about one year (just past the warranty) then died. No warning, just didn’t mount one day. Tried it on other computers: nothing. AcomData did not reply to my tech support request.
Rating: 1 / 5
October 13th, 2009 - 02:12
What the @#*%# ??
I purchased a 150GB version less than one year ago. It died on me yesterday, taking along 5 years of digital photos and 20 GB of music. Many of the files were located only in this HDD. (yes, I SHOULD be using external HDD for backup purposes only, but of course, I didn’t!)
I quoted several data recovery services. The quotes ranged from $250 – $2500. ARRRRGH!!
A spoke with a co-workers who used to work for a hard drive manufacturer. When I described the symptoms (The HDD indicator light is on, but it does not appear to spin up. No “clicking noise of death”) he suggested a few things before I invest the large sums of money with a data recovery service.
I opened the external case, disconnected the HDD from the interface PCB and the connectors and took the HDD out. I opened my PC, connected the HDD to the power supply cable….and voila! the HDD started to spin. The problem was with the stuff acomdata designed (it was the power supply. The HDD is sourced from and OEM) The whole thing took 10 minutes.
The HDD now resides in my PC’s spare HDD slot. Didn’t need to install a new driver. The PC recognizes it as before. No $$ invovled. WOO HOO!
The moral of the story is…acomdata is not to be trusted (don’t cheap out on HDD’s!!)….and BACK UP YOUR DATA!
Rating: 1 / 5
October 13th, 2009 - 02:58
I bought this item over Christmas and had problems booting it up from the start. I had to reboot my iMac into Windows to reformat it and then reformat it again under Mac OSX so Mac OSX would not recognize it. After I reformatted it, the performance was sketchy at best. Sometimes my iMac would recognize it and sometimes it would not. Huge disappointment and it’s too late to return it. No problems under PC though.
Rating: 3 / 5
October 13th, 2009 - 05:22
Mine crashed after about a year and 1/2 for no apparent reason and support from Acomdata. They told me to go after the store who sold it to me. I have another Acomdata that has yet to crash and I am throwing in the trash just in case. There are too many similar products in both price and specification to take a chance on this very poor product.
Rating: 1 / 5