I was too curious and broke the seal. Will actually try to use it, probably for the rare full /home backup every 2 or 3 years, since it needs external power and is probably not that fast. I’d date this artifact late 2000s? It might have USB 2, making it fast enough.
Weird though that I’d buy this and forget about it forever. It definitely cost enough to matter to me back then.



Old enough it’s most likely a regular drive inside the shell, crack that slut open and harvest it. Going to be far more useful with proper sata hookups.
Don’t you think it might have IDE? In any case, I use almost only SSDs internally, HDDs externally for backups.
Nah, not in the era of USB 2.0. IDE was considered legacy at that point.
I don’t think I even saw a hdd over 120gb with IDE. Last IDE drive I had was 60gb. This thing is for sure sata
Seconding the other guy; 500GB was where I saw IDE HDDs top out.
I remember seeing IDE drives all the way up to 1TB. Anything over 80GB was pretty uncommon though.
I had some 320GB IDE drives in my nForce2 chipset Socket A system, which thanks to the southbridge used on the motherboard, I had USB2.0 but no SATA support.
You could have gotten a sata enclosure and had faster speeds over USB 2.0 lol but if I remember correctly, back then the first released sata enclosures were like $100.
USB2.0 is considerably slower than an internal IDE drive. USB 2.0 is 480 megabit/s, and the final generation ATA 133 spec is 133 megabyte/s, which is around 1065 megabit/s, so over twice as fast. Ditto for things like latency. While the hard drives of the time physically couldn’t saturate a PATA connection, the difference in speed was still easily noticed.
At the time, if you wanted a fast external drive you used Firewire, which I actually did. I had several drives that were Firewire 800 but also included USB2.0 to connect to computers that lacked Firewire. I don’t recall if any of my motherboards that have Firewire built in can boot off of it but I kind of doubt it.
Later we had eSata for a brief period of time. I still miss it as it’s not as fast as USB3.0 which is the only option even today on many new external drives.
Theoretically yes, but most sata drives were faster than ide drives. So it ends up being a wash really…USB 2.0 being the bottle neck and ide drive speed and it not being able to completely hit ATA133s transfer rate really. I still bet that while on paper the IDE looks faster, it’ll be slower in real world.
I have some 500gb IDE drives (maybe 320? its been a while) kicking around in some original xboxes in the shed. A few have 2tb sata installed with adaptors.
I too have some vague memories shucking 1tb IDE drives and installing those in customers xbox too but that’s from 20+ years ago now 😶🌫️
Holy crap, I didn’t realize they kept making the drives large after sata came out. I jumped on that tech real quick once it showed up. IDE was such a pain in the ass for air flow and well making the PC look clean. I remember some people cutting the ide cable so you could roll them into a sleeve vs having a fat ribbon cable.
They still make them.
https://www.cablesdirect.com/store/p/3519.aspx
Only thing I can think of running ide out there are old industrial machines, like CNC stuff…but servers in a DC??? What year is it!?
Slim chance but I’d atleast crack it open and find out, and if you don’t want to use it internally perhaps just a new case for it to utilize usb 3 or c. Normally I’d say preserve the whole thing but with drive prices I’d take the drive and use the case as an ashtray.
Or, conversely use the powered shell on a bigger drive (assuming it’s not IDE.)
Ide with 750 gigs though?
With USB 2.0 idk if that’s even worth it.
When you need it, its worth it. When you don’t, it still might be.