Last updated at 08/06/2026 18:35:53
ST2000LM015 Seagate Barracuda Internal 2.5" Sata Drive 2tb 6gb/ S 5400rpm 2yr Wty St2000lm015
Delivery $15
Seagate 2TB BarraCuda 5400 RPM 128MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 2.5" Laptop Internal Hard Drive ST2000LM015
Seagate Barracuda St2000lm015 2tb 5.4k 128mb Sata Iii 2.5'' Hard Drive
Delivery $75.03
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
originally posted on newegg.com
To be fair, in my experience using this drive for nearly 1.5 years, it has performed quite well. I have used it as a Windows OS drive running software which is not incredibly write-intensive which is reportedly a weakness of an HDD like this. It has performed well for my purposes, so I have nothing to complain about usage-wise. This HDD uses SMR (shingled magnetic recording) technology to record data to its platters. This technology allows HDDs to be built at higher capacities with fewer platters making them cheaper. What makes write speeds in this drive slower is that it must rewrite multiple tracks just to update as little as a single sector on disk. Such write operations can get pretty lengthy and complicated when lots of random writes are being performed which ... MoreTo be fair, in my experience using this drive for nearly 1.5 years, it has performed quite well. I have used it as a Windows OS drive running software which is not incredibly write-intensive which is reportedly a weakness of an HDD like this. It has performed well for my purposes, so I have nothing to complain about usage-wise. This HDD uses SMR (shingled magnetic recording) technology to record data to its platters. This technology allows HDDs to be built at higher capacities with fewer platters making them cheaper. What makes write speeds in this drive slower is that it must rewrite multiple tracks just to update as little as a single sector on disk. Such write operations can get pretty lengthy and complicated when lots of random writes are being performed which is why the drive needs 256 MB of cache memory (plus other measures) to mitigate the performance impact. But even that is not enough in some applications, especially certain RAID configurations used in some NAS and enterprise systems which got Western Digital in trouble in 2019. While Seagate didn't at first disclose the use of SMR in some of its drives, at least it didn't promote any particular series of drives using SMR technology for use in such configurations. I suppose, given my experience running an SMR drive as a Windows OS drive, I might buy one again for the same purpose; but it does still irk me; like it has irked so many others as shown by ridiculously popular reviews dumping on, ripping, destroying SMR drives; that such a technology was not disclosed early on in better detail to help customers make an educated decision on what they needed to buy in order to avoid setbacks caused by crippling performance issues in certain applications. The Barracuda line of drives is intended for typical desktop applications and storage. It is not intended for extremely random-write-intensive applications like large databases and sophisticated RAID configurations. For such high-performance applications, look to the Barracuda Pros and the IronWolf lines which all use good, ol' conventional recording methods. Sure, they cost a bit more, but you get what you pay for.
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
I Think the pros says it all, but I could add that since I tested these outside of a case, on mounts that have foam rubber edges to protect the drives from vibration, that while I was reading from one of these and writing to another, I felt very little vibration, so I have to say these are finely crafted drives. It has 7 platters after all with each platter holding approx 1.75TB, and spinning 7 platters @ 7200RPMs with almost no vibration is quite an accomplishment. Using Win7 and a fresh boot to make sure nothing was happening in the background that I didn't know about, I copied about 200GB of data from one to the other and the end write speed was 220MB/s. Edit: I wrote lots of data to these drives, I found they write around 200-210MB/s mid disk, and around 190MB/s ... MoreI Think the pros says it all, but I could add that since I tested these outside of a case, on mounts that have foam rubber edges to protect the drives from vibration, that while I was reading from one of these and writing to another, I felt very little vibration, so I have to say these are finely crafted drives. It has 7 platters after all with each platter holding approx 1.75TB, and spinning 7 platters @ 7200RPMs with almost no vibration is quite an accomplishment. Using Win7 and a fresh boot to make sure nothing was happening in the background that I didn't know about, I copied about 200GB of data from one to the other and the end write speed was 220MB/s. Edit: I wrote lots of data to these drives, I found they write around 200-210MB/s mid disk, and around 190MB/s towards the end (drive being almost full) with files from 1GB - 4GB. I LOVE these drives. 5 yr. warranty puts the icing on the cake. This is a no-brainer purchase @ < $350 USD for those who need the drive space. As far as people making any comments about there not being 12TB on the drive. I can't say what I think of people who don't do any research before making a review on a product, which has consequences, but I can say they don't know how to look at detailed information. They also don't understand that Microsoft should have NEVER programmed a dialog box that shows a rough approximation for the amount of space on a disk, or the size of a data file. So, EVERY manufacturer of storage, of ANY kind lists capacity based on numbers that humans work with, which is the decimal number system, also referred to as base10. You have the characters 0 - 9, and it's the number system you learned as a child and have used all your life. This value is a REAL representation of the amount of storage on whatever media it is you purchase. Now, if you're smart and know how to use Windows, you can go to the properties of this hard drive, and you see TWO, count them, TWO different numbers. One is a rough value and the other is a REAL value. The rough value shows 10.9TB, the REAL value shows 12,000,002,306,048 bytes, and that's what both my drives show. I read that number at 12 trillion, 2 million, 306 thousand and 48. Or to use computer and other tech language for numbers, I read that as 12 terabytes, 2 megabytes, 306 kilobytes and 48 bytes. Rounding off that number, I get 12 terabytes, which is EXACTLY what this drive is advertised to be. I could go into why Microsoft should have NEVER included a rough approximation of media based on binary bits, where computer scientists decided at some point that since the binary (base2, where the only characters are 0 and1) bit positions represent starting at bit0: 1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024,2048, etc...., with each next significant digit doubling in value, that they would call 1024 - 1K. 1K (1024) is the number you have when binary bit 10 = 1 and all the other bits = 0. It is also the number of combinations you have with 10 binary digits to make numbers, 0 – 1023 in decimal, or in hexadecimal, 000 – 3FF, or in binary, 00,0000,0000 – 11,1111,1111 (grouped in 4 to read easily in HEX). This is an interpretation that should have stayed in the field of computer science, computer engineering and digital logic and never left that field to the common user of computers, which is what happened because MICROSOFT didn't think about the consequences of showing that value, which is only useful if you work on computers, which requires an understanding of binary and hexadecimal math, or work as a computer engineer. Actually to work on computers today you don't have to know anything about hex or binary math, because it's simply a matter of swapping out components, but in the old days, when a CPU wasn't on a single die, packaged as one component, but instead a CPU was made up of many ICs or going back even further, discrete components, so to fix a computer you have to partially be a computer engineer. I know this because I worked on 1950s and 1960s computers, along with other electronics. To say this another way, in the field of computer science they can use terminology that best suits them, and if they want to call the value 1024 1K, it's their right. Outside of that world, 1 Kilo = 1000. What is never true in real values is that 1000 = 1024. As you can see those numbers are different. We should all know that 1000 = 1000, and 1000 cannot equal any other number, not even 1024. Leave the computer terms to those who work in the field, you should continue using numbers that the rest of the world understands. I hope this explanation is helpful, and explains why us human beings should use numbers that the typical human understands, and why Microsoft is mostly to blame for this misunderstanding. BTW factory math = decimal math. 1000 = 1000. I can't imagine working in a factory where I have to use math, and 1000=1024. Puzzled
originally posted on bestbuy.com
I don't know what I was thinking by buying a hard drive from SEAGATE but it's too late. I bought it since I needed to replace my old WD Green 1TB HDD. I'm thinking, no issues, right? Seagate is a trusted brand, I read reviews of their Barracuda line and it seems to fit the bill.Nope, I was wrong. I purchased one of these hard drives, plopped it in, got an error when starting up saying that it could fail at any time. Alright, I go exchange it. I plop the new one in. Same thing. To rule out if it's a PC related issue, I plop in a friend's new WD Blue hard drive. No error. I exchange this second hard drive for another one and sure enough, I get the same error. I look online to see if anyone has issues with this hard drive and there's a lot of mixed reviews... for a ... MoreI don't know what I was thinking by buying a hard drive from SEAGATE but it's too late. I bought it since I needed to replace my old WD Green 1TB HDD. I'm thinking, no issues, right? Seagate is a trusted brand, I read reviews of their Barracuda line and it seems to fit the bill.Nope, I was wrong. I purchased one of these hard drives, plopped it in, got an error when starting up saying that it could fail at any time. Alright, I go exchange it. I plop the new one in. Same thing. To rule out if it's a PC related issue, I plop in a friend's new WD Blue hard drive. No error. I exchange this second hard drive for another one and sure enough, I get the same error. I look online to see if anyone has issues with this hard drive and there's a lot of mixed reviews... for a simple 2 TB HDD. I just ended up disabling the hard drive warning because I was tired of exchanging. 1 year later, I'm not seeing any issues so that's good I guess? But let's see if it lasts the 8 years my WD Green 1TB lasted.
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ST2000LM015 Seagate Barracuda Internal 2.5" Sata Drive 2tb 6gb/ S 5400rpm 2yr Wty St2000lm015
Delivery $15
Seagate 2TB BarraCuda 5400 RPM 128MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 2.5" Laptop Internal Hard Drive ST2000LM015
Seagate Barracuda St2000lm015 2tb 5.4k 128mb Sata Iii 2.5'' Hard Drive
Delivery $75.03
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
To be fair, in my experience using this drive for nearly 1.5 years, it has performed quite well. I have used it as a Windows OS drive running software which is not incredibly write-intensive which is reportedly a weakness of an HDD like this. It has performed well for my purposes, so I have nothing to complain about usage-wise. This HDD uses SMR (shingled magnetic recording) technology to record data to its platters. This technology allows HDDs to be built at higher capacities with fewer platters making them cheaper. What makes write speeds in this drive slower is that it must rewrite multiple tracks just to update as little as a single sector on disk. Such write operations can get pretty lengthy and complicated when lots of random writes are being performed which ... MoreTo be fair, in my experience using this drive for nearly 1.5 years, it has performed quite well. I have used it as a Windows OS drive running software which is not incredibly write-intensive which is reportedly a weakness of an HDD like this. It has performed well for my purposes, so I have nothing to complain about usage-wise. This HDD uses SMR (shingled magnetic recording) technology to record data to its platters. This technology allows HDDs to be built at higher capacities with fewer platters making them cheaper. What makes write speeds in this drive slower is that it must rewrite multiple tracks just to update as little as a single sector on disk. Such write operations can get pretty lengthy and complicated when lots of random writes are being performed which is why the drive needs 256 MB of cache memory (plus other measures) to mitigate the performance impact. But even that is not enough in some applications, especially certain RAID configurations used in some NAS and enterprise systems which got Western Digital in trouble in 2019. While Seagate didn't at first disclose the use of SMR in some of its drives, at least it didn't promote any particular series of drives using SMR technology for use in such configurations. I suppose, given my experience running an SMR drive as a Windows OS drive, I might buy one again for the same purpose; but it does still irk me; like it has irked so many others as shown by ridiculously popular reviews dumping on, ripping, destroying SMR drives; that such a technology was not disclosed early on in better detail to help customers make an educated decision on what they needed to buy in order to avoid setbacks caused by crippling performance issues in certain applications. The Barracuda line of drives is intended for typical desktop applications and storage. It is not intended for extremely random-write-intensive applications like large databases and sophisticated RAID configurations. For such high-performance applications, look to the Barracuda Pros and the IronWolf lines which all use good, ol' conventional recording methods. Sure, they cost a bit more, but you get what you pay for.
I Think the pros says it all, but I could add that since I tested these outside of a case, on mounts that have foam rubber edges to protect the drives from vibration, that while I was reading from one of these and writing to another, I felt very little vibration, so I have to say these are finely crafted drives. It has 7 platters after all with each platter holding approx 1.75TB, and spinning 7 platters @ 7200RPMs with almost no vibration is quite an accomplishment. Using Win7 and a fresh boot to make sure nothing was happening in the background that I didn't know about, I copied about 200GB of data from one to the other and the end write speed was 220MB/s. Edit: I wrote lots of data to these drives, I found they write around 200-210MB/s mid disk, and around 190MB/s ... MoreI Think the pros says it all, but I could add that since I tested these outside of a case, on mounts that have foam rubber edges to protect the drives from vibration, that while I was reading from one of these and writing to another, I felt very little vibration, so I have to say these are finely crafted drives. It has 7 platters after all with each platter holding approx 1.75TB, and spinning 7 platters @ 7200RPMs with almost no vibration is quite an accomplishment. Using Win7 and a fresh boot to make sure nothing was happening in the background that I didn't know about, I copied about 200GB of data from one to the other and the end write speed was 220MB/s. Edit: I wrote lots of data to these drives, I found they write around 200-210MB/s mid disk, and around 190MB/s towards the end (drive being almost full) with files from 1GB - 4GB. I LOVE these drives. 5 yr. warranty puts the icing on the cake. This is a no-brainer purchase @ < $350 USD for those who need the drive space. As far as people making any comments about there not being 12TB on the drive. I can't say what I think of people who don't do any research before making a review on a product, which has consequences, but I can say they don't know how to look at detailed information. They also don't understand that Microsoft should have NEVER programmed a dialog box that shows a rough approximation for the amount of space on a disk, or the size of a data file. So, EVERY manufacturer of storage, of ANY kind lists capacity based on numbers that humans work with, which is the decimal number system, also referred to as base10. You have the characters 0 - 9, and it's the number system you learned as a child and have used all your life. This value is a REAL representation of the amount of storage on whatever media it is you purchase. Now, if you're smart and know how to use Windows, you can go to the properties of this hard drive, and you see TWO, count them, TWO different numbers. One is a rough value and the other is a REAL value. The rough value shows 10.9TB, the REAL value shows 12,000,002,306,048 bytes, and that's what both my drives show. I read that number at 12 trillion, 2 million, 306 thousand and 48. Or to use computer and other tech language for numbers, I read that as 12 terabytes, 2 megabytes, 306 kilobytes and 48 bytes. Rounding off that number, I get 12 terabytes, which is EXACTLY what this drive is advertised to be. I could go into why Microsoft should have NEVER included a rough approximation of media based on binary bits, where computer scientists decided at some point that since the binary (base2, where the only characters are 0 and1) bit positions represent starting at bit0: 1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024,2048, etc...., with each next significant digit doubling in value, that they would call 1024 - 1K. 1K (1024) is the number you have when binary bit 10 = 1 and all the other bits = 0. It is also the number of combinations you have with 10 binary digits to make numbers, 0 – 1023 in decimal, or in hexadecimal, 000 – 3FF, or in binary, 00,0000,0000 – 11,1111,1111 (grouped in 4 to read easily in HEX). This is an interpretation that should have stayed in the field of computer science, computer engineering and digital logic and never left that field to the common user of computers, which is what happened because MICROSOFT didn't think about the consequences of showing that value, which is only useful if you work on computers, which requires an understanding of binary and hexadecimal math, or work as a computer engineer. Actually to work on computers today you don't have to know anything about hex or binary math, because it's simply a matter of swapping out components, but in the old days, when a CPU wasn't on a single die, packaged as one component, but instead a CPU was made up of many ICs or going back even further, discrete components, so to fix a computer you have to partially be a computer engineer. I know this because I worked on 1950s and 1960s computers, along with other electronics. To say this another way, in the field of computer science they can use terminology that best suits them, and if they want to call the value 1024 1K, it's their right. Outside of that world, 1 Kilo = 1000. What is never true in real values is that 1000 = 1024. As you can see those numbers are different. We should all know that 1000 = 1000, and 1000 cannot equal any other number, not even 1024. Leave the computer terms to those who work in the field, you should continue using numbers that the rest of the world understands. I hope this explanation is helpful, and explains why us human beings should use numbers that the typical human understands, and why Microsoft is mostly to blame for this misunderstanding. BTW factory math = decimal math. 1000 = 1000. I can't imagine working in a factory where I have to use math, and 1000=1024. Puzzled
I don't know what I was thinking by buying a hard drive from SEAGATE but it's too late. I bought it since I needed to replace my old WD Green 1TB HDD. I'm thinking, no issues, right? Seagate is a trusted brand, I read reviews of their Barracuda line and it seems to fit the bill.Nope, I was wrong. I purchased one of these hard drives, plopped it in, got an error when starting up saying that it could fail at any time. Alright, I go exchange it. I plop the new one in. Same thing. To rule out if it's a PC related issue, I plop in a friend's new WD Blue hard drive. No error. I exchange this second hard drive for another one and sure enough, I get the same error. I look online to see if anyone has issues with this hard drive and there's a lot of mixed reviews... for a ... MoreI don't know what I was thinking by buying a hard drive from SEAGATE but it's too late. I bought it since I needed to replace my old WD Green 1TB HDD. I'm thinking, no issues, right? Seagate is a trusted brand, I read reviews of their Barracuda line and it seems to fit the bill.Nope, I was wrong. I purchased one of these hard drives, plopped it in, got an error when starting up saying that it could fail at any time. Alright, I go exchange it. I plop the new one in. Same thing. To rule out if it's a PC related issue, I plop in a friend's new WD Blue hard drive. No error. I exchange this second hard drive for another one and sure enough, I get the same error. I look online to see if anyone has issues with this hard drive and there's a lot of mixed reviews... for a simple 2 TB HDD. I just ended up disabling the hard drive warning because I was tired of exchanging. 1 year later, I'm not seeing any issues so that's good I guess? But let's see if it lasts the 8 years my WD Green 1TB lasted.
This hard drive is loud and kinda slow. But it was inexpensive and has large capacity (2TB).It's good for just storage, but It's NOT good for gaming as a primary drive. Some games lately are conpletely unoptimized for Hard Drives and you will have problems playing. One example is Battlefield 2042. It takes minutes to join a match on hard drive, and even if you join at the start of the match with friends at the same time, you will be the last one to actually enter the match. You will be stuck on the loading screen for long before you join. And even after the match ends, or if you quit the match, you will have to wait for a loading screen.When starting a multiplayer match, by the time the match finishes loading up and puts you in the game, everyone will have already ... MoreThis hard drive is loud and kinda slow. But it was inexpensive and has large capacity (2TB).It's good for just storage, but It's NOT good for gaming as a primary drive. Some games lately are conpletely unoptimized for Hard Drives and you will have problems playing. One example is Battlefield 2042. It takes minutes to join a match on hard drive, and even if you join at the start of the match with friends at the same time, you will be the last one to actually enter the match. You will be stuck on the loading screen for long before you join. And even after the match ends, or if you quit the match, you will have to wait for a loading screen.When starting a multiplayer match, by the time the match finishes loading up and puts you in the game, everyone will have already started playing and there will be progress made in the match. It's very annoying. Some other games are not like that, so maybe it is just EA/DICEs fault and not thenhard drive's, but still, after this I wouldn't trust a hard drive for gaming again since SSDs have become the standard now and games will start depending more and more on SSDs.
I have always gotten dependable service with Seagate hard drives. Over a period of 8 years and building desktop PCs for my family here and in Alabama out of more than 12 drives purchased during that 8 years I only had issues with 2. Seagate replaced them under warranty in short order. Other brands ran 30% or higher failures. 2 problem drives out of more than 12 in 8 years speaks volumes about the quality and dependability of their drives. We have 4 home computers all with 2 or more hard drives in them now running Windows OSs from Windows 10 back to a couple of legacy build PCs running Windows 95 OSR 2.5, Windows 98 SE, Windows XP and Windows 7. All are running Seagate drives. 2 drives each in the Windows 95 and 98 PCs and 3 each in the XP and Win7 PCs. My Windows 10 ... MoreI have always gotten dependable service with Seagate hard drives. Over a period of 8 years and building desktop PCs for my family here and in Alabama out of more than 12 drives purchased during that 8 years I only had issues with 2. Seagate replaced them under warranty in short order. Other brands ran 30% or higher failures. 2 problem drives out of more than 12 in 8 years speaks volumes about the quality and dependability of their drives. We have 4 home computers all with 2 or more hard drives in them now running Windows OSs from Windows 10 back to a couple of legacy build PCs running Windows 95 OSR 2.5, Windows 98 SE, Windows XP and Windows 7. All are running Seagate drives. 2 drives each in the Windows 95 and 98 PCs and 3 each in the XP and Win7 PCs. My Windows 10 Pro is running 4 Seagate drives. A 2GB system and 3 X 4GB program/game drives. I will continue using Seagate HDs until they stop making them or their quality drops below my standards. No sign of that happening any time soon.
Ive built gaming PCs for self & 3 others as a hobby over past 13 yrs. Its actually fairly easy. In doing so, ive learned some of the best components builders use for: hard drives, graphic cards, memory sticks & central processing units (CPU) as well as power units & CPU coolers & fans. Aluminum cases as well. I feel very knowledgeable in recommending any part of a PC inc this hard drive. Frankly, Western Digital Blue or this one are both excellent. If money to burn, grab a WD Black. But theres just a bit more speed for the latter for an xtra $50-75, not worth it to me.
This was purchased to replace the original HDD in my 27 2013 iMac. I thought about going with an SSD. I contemplated a WD HDD. Ultimately, I went with the BarraCuda due to the high number of positive reviews & the fact that I'm fine with an HDD. Good price, easy installation (provided you're okay with digging into your iMac). There were over 103,000 on Amazon. I chose to purchase it through B&H since they're an excellent company. I figured they would package the drive better than someone like Amazon...they did. The worst part of the whole process was reinstalling operating systems due to the time involved. Overall, I appreciate the education that comes along with the whole endeavor.It works like the old drive. It's quiet. It's fast enough for my purposes. I have ... MoreThis was purchased to replace the original HDD in my 27 2013 iMac. I thought about going with an SSD. I contemplated a WD HDD. Ultimately, I went with the BarraCuda due to the high number of positive reviews & the fact that I'm fine with an HDD. Good price, easy installation (provided you're okay with digging into your iMac). There were over 103,000 on Amazon. I chose to purchase it through B&H since they're an excellent company. I figured they would package the drive better than someone like Amazon...they did. The worst part of the whole process was reinstalling operating systems due to the time involved. Overall, I appreciate the education that comes along with the whole endeavor.It works like the old drive. It's quiet. It's fast enough for my purposes. I have twice as much space than I've had for almost 10 years. B&H is excellent to work with.
The CK barracuda tutor by internal sat. A hard drive has been excellent. Addition to my PC setup with a massive tutor by capacity. It provides ample storage space for my files. Games and multimedia, the driver's 7200 RPM speed insurance fast read and right times significantly improving. My system's overall performance installation was straightforward and the drive has been running smoothly without any issues. The SAT a 6 GB is interface. Maximizes data transfer rates, making file transfers and loading times impressively quick. Additionally, the drive is remarkable quiet even. Under heavy load Which is a Which is a big plus for a more pleasant computing experience.She gets reliability and reputation for durable products.Give me confidence in the longevity of this ... MoreThe CK barracuda tutor by internal sat. A hard drive has been excellent. Addition to my PC setup with a massive tutor by capacity. It provides ample storage space for my files. Games and multimedia, the driver's 7200 RPM speed insurance fast read and right times significantly improving. My system's overall performance installation was straightforward and the drive has been running smoothly without any issues. The SAT a 6 GB is interface. Maximizes data transfer rates, making file transfers and loading times impressively quick. Additionally, the drive is remarkable quiet even. Under heavy load Which is a Which is a big plus for a more pleasant computing experience.She gets reliability and reputation for durable products.Give me confidence in the longevity of this dry.Whether you're looking to expand your storage for gaming video or general use to see gate barracuda.2 TB is a fantastic choice highly recommended for anyone.In need of reliable high capacity internal hardware
I used this drive to store my Steam/Epic/Blizzard libraries. Game updates/installs can perform 10s of GBs of writes (ARK is over 100 GB). - Original drive started showing significant slow downs after about a year, and then Steam started reporting "Disk Write Error"s for most game updates, especially for larger 10+ GB updates. I noticed that on these updates the drive write speed would start off fine but then shortly plummet to mere 10s KB/sec then to zero. - Early on the drive did not show any errors. It passed the short tests in SeaTools. However, it was very common for MS Windows to report errors in the file system. Requiring me to periodically run chkdsk to fix. - The drive eventually showed errors in the short/long tests in SeaTools and the drive was replaced ... MoreI used this drive to store my Steam/Epic/Blizzard libraries. Game updates/installs can perform 10s of GBs of writes (ARK is over 100 GB). - Original drive started showing significant slow downs after about a year, and then Steam started reporting "Disk Write Error"s for most game updates, especially for larger 10+ GB updates. I noticed that on these updates the drive write speed would start off fine but then shortly plummet to mere 10s KB/sec then to zero. - Early on the drive did not show any errors. It passed the short tests in SeaTools. However, it was very common for MS Windows to report errors in the file system. Requiring me to periodically run chkdsk to fix. - The drive eventually showed errors in the short/long tests in SeaTools and the drive was replaced under warranty. - The replacement I received was a slightly different model: ST2000DM005 - This drive failed within two months of being used. Same symptoms. Read/write speeds dropped to 3/67 MB/s (yes, that is 3 MB/s read speed) as measured by CrystalDiskMark. Both of the drives which failed were SMR. I have 2 other Seagate Barracuda HDD drives in my system which are 4 and 6 years old, but still going strong. These drives are the older CMR technology. I do not think SMR is up to task for handling game libraries. Final note: I had originally given this product a 2 egg rating because it was being replaced under warranty. I would rate it at 1 egg since the warranty replacement also failed. However, the site will not allow me to change the egg rating.
Great product. Went in easy. No issues...My issue, if you're an amateur you'll be lost. A little guide online PDF explaining the process of reinstalling your OS and downloading chipset drivers and other assorted WIFI, graphics and Bluetooth drivers Those are the basics on new rigs. I was completely lost, lucky I have techy friends. Other than that, thing is lighting fast, huge storage, great price. Got to me in 2 business days. Shipping a little steep, ad a USPS option will get that figure down. 👍
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Seagate Barracuda 2TB 2.5" HDD SATA
Introducing the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive - the perfect solution for all your storage needs! With Seagate's over 20 years of trusted performance and reliability, you can rest assured that your data is safe and secure. This hard drive boasts the broadest 2.5-inch hard drive portfolio with up to 5 TB capacity and is available in both 7 mm and 15 mm form factors, making it suitable for a variety of compute applications. It is also the thinnest and lightest 2.5-inch hard drive with up to 2 TB storage in a 7 mm z-height, providing seamless upgrades of thin and light laptops and smaller form factor systems. Experience fast data rates of up to 140 MB/s, enabling superior PC end-user experience and snappier file transfers. The 2.5-inch, 15 mm z-height hard drives provide 3 TB to 5 TB in capacity, which offers the highest-capacity 2.5-inch hard drives available for external or all-in-one storage. The 15 mm z-height also enables slimmer all-in-one desktop PC drives while helping reduce system heat generation and vibration. Furthermore, low startup current configurations for 3 TB to 5 TB drives enable use in legacy low-current systems like USB-2 external boxes while simultaneously lowering power consumption. With 5 TB drives storing more than 1.25 million songs and 600 hours of HD video, you can store as many documents, pictures, and videos as you need with 2 TB capacity. Experience rapid processing speed with 128 MB cache buffer and have data stored faster with SATA/600 interface that optimizes burst performance. Upgrade your computer's storage and improve its performance today with the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive!
Introducing the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive - the perfect solution for all your storage needs! With Seagate's over 20 years of trusted performance and reliability, you can rest assured that your data is safe and secure. This hard drive boasts the broadest 2.5-inch hard drive portfolio with up to 5 TB capacity and is available in both 7 mm and 15 mm form factors, making it suitable for a variety of compute applications. It is also the thinnest and lightest 2.5-inch hard drive with up to 2 TB storage in a 7 mm z-height, providing seamless upgrades of thin and light laptops and smaller form factor systems. Experience fast data rates of up to 140 MB/s, enabling superior PC end-user experience and snappier file transfers. The 2.5-inch, 15 mm z-height hard drives provide 3 TB to 5 TB in capacity, which offers the highest-capacity 2.5-inch hard drives available for external or all-in-one storage. The 15 mm z-height also enables slimmer all-in-one desktop PC drives while helping reduce system heat generation and vibration. Furthermore, low startup current configurations for 3 TB to 5 TB drives enable use in legacy low-current systems like USB-2 external boxes while simultaneously lowering power consumption. With 5 TB drives storing more than 1.25 million songs and 600 hours of HD video, you can store as many documents, pictures, and videos as you need with 2 TB capacity. Experience rapid processing speed with 128 MB cache buffer and have data stored faster with SATA/600 interface that optimizes burst performance. Upgrade your computer's storage and improve its performance today with the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive!
Introducing the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive - the perfect solution for all your storage needs! With Seagate's over 20 years of trusted performance and reliability, you can rest assured that your data is safe and secure. This hard drive boasts the broadest 2.5-inch hard drive portfolio with up to 5 TB capacity and is available in both 7 mm and 15 mm form factors, making it suitable for a variety of compute applications. It is also the thinnest and lightest 2.5-inch hard drive with up to 2 TB storage in a 7 mm z-height, providing seamless upgrades of thin and light laptops and smaller form factor systems. Experience fast data rates of up to 140 MB/s, enabling superior PC end-user experience and snappier file transfers. The 2.5-inch, 15 mm z-height hard drives provide 3 TB to 5 TB in capacity, which offers the highest-capacity 2.5-inch hard drives available for external or all-in-one storage. The 15 mm z-height also enables slimmer all-in-one desktop PC drives while helping reduce system heat generation and vibration. Furthermore, low startup current configurations for 3 TB to 5 TB drives enable use in legacy low-current systems like USB-2 external boxes while simultaneously lowering power consumption. With 5 TB drives storing more than 1.25 million songs and 600 hours of HD video, you can store as many documents, pictures, and videos as you need with 2 TB capacity. Experience rapid processing speed with 128 MB cache buffer and have data stored faster with SATA/600 interface that optimizes burst performance. Upgrade your computer's storage and improve its performance today with the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive!
Introducing the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive - the perfect solution for all your storage needs! With Seagate's over 20 years of trusted performance and reliability, you can rest assured that your data is safe and secure. This hard drive boasts the broadest 2.5-inch hard drive portfolio with up to 5 TB capacity and is available in both 7 mm and 15 mm form factors, making it suitable for a variety of compute applications. It is also the thinnest and lightest 2.5-inch hard drive with up to 2 TB storage in a 7 mm z-height, providing seamless upgrades of thin and light laptops and smaller form factor systems. Experience fast data rates of up to 140 MB/s, enabling superior PC end-user experience and snappier file transfers. The 2.5-inch, 15 mm z-height hard drives provide 3 TB to 5 TB in capacity, which offers the highest-capacity 2.5-inch hard drives available for external or all-in-one storage. The 15 mm z-height also enables slimmer all-in-one desktop PC drives while helping reduce system heat generation and vibration. Furthermore, low startup current configurations for 3 TB to 5 TB drives enable use in legacy low-current systems like USB-2 external boxes while simultaneously lowering power consumption. With 5 TB drives storing more than 1.25 million songs and 600 hours of HD video, you can store as many documents, pictures, and videos as you need with 2 TB capacity. Experience rapid processing speed with 128 MB cache buffer and have data stored faster with SATA/600 interface that optimizes burst performance. Upgrade your computer's storage and improve its performance today with the Seagate BarraCuda ST2000LM015 2 TB Hard Drive!
in 3 offers
The lowest price for Seagate Barracuda 2TB 2.5" HDD SATA right now is $183.00 at www.i-tech.com.au, compared across 3 retailers.
The all-time low was $89.70 on 6 July 2025 — today's price is 104% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 8 June 2026.