OCFreaks!

ADATA DashDrive HE 720 USB 3.0 Portable hard disk review

< Prev Next >

Howdy folks! hows it going out there?
Today for you guys i have something from ADATA.
Something from their range of portable HDD’s.

but first a few words about the company

ADATA Technology Co., Ltd. is a Taiwanese memory and storage manufacturer, founded in May 2001 by Simon Chen.Its main product line consists of DRAM modules, USB drives, USBhard drives and memory cards in CompactFlash and Secure digital formats. ADATA has also explored other markets, such as digital frames, solid-state drives, and Express Cards.

Now that’s out-of-the-way,lets see what we have in our hands today.
Presenting the Adata DashDrive HE 720

Main feature


Lets check out the product specifications and some pictures.

Capacity 500GB
Color Titanium
Dimensions (L x W x H) 117 x 79 x 8.9mm (4.6 x 3.1 x 0.4in)
Weight 164g (0.4lb)
Interface (USB) USB 3.0
(backward compatible with USB 2.0)
Interface (HDD) 2.5″ SATA II
System requirements Windows XP/Vista/7/8
Mac OS X 10.6 or later
Linux Kernel 2.6 or later
Temperature Operating 5ºC~50ºC; Storage -40ºC~60ºC
Accessories USB 3.0 cable; Quick Start Guide
Texture Stainless steel metal brushed surface, plus mirror-like polish
Warranty 3 years(Where differences may exist, this warranty term supersedes information shown elsewhere.)

Specs look fine from here..lets see if they hold up in the benchmarks.
but first,some photo’s

First up the box,

nothing much to write,let the pictures do the work.
The front and the back lists out important features about the product so that one can get a grip on what exactly he is purchasing.

Box Contents

Nothing much to say the package comes with the HDD and a USB3.0 Cable.Although its a bit short.

Now to the main star of the show..the drive itself…

Up close and personal the drive looks very in my opinion.

the back has four tiny bumps to act as stands..its about 1MM in height.The bumps helps it to not get scratches.Although i doubt such a nice looking drive will get man handled enough to get scratches.

A few more pics of this beauty and am gonna close this chapter.

So that’s take care of the photo shoot..am sure u guys like it by now as i am..but lets see if it can hold up in benchmarks.

For the benchmarks part i am going to run my normal suite of storage benchmarks and will see how it performs.

 

Test System
CPU Intel Core i5 2500K
Motherboard Asus P8Z68 Deluxe
Ram Kingston 1600Mhz 8GB DDR3
Storage Western Digital 320GB HDD (WD320AAKX)
Adata Dash Drive HE 720
Video Card Sapphire Radeon HD 7850
Cooling Noctua NH D14 with GT 1850 fans
Case Ghetto made bench table
Power supply Unit Corsair AX 1200W

Now lets see how the benchmarks stack up

Atto Disk Benchmark:
One of the finest tools available to measure storage performance is ATTO. The great thing about ATTO is that we can test with predefined block sizes. So we can test with a 32MB sequence of 4KB files, yet also 32MB in 1MB files. This gives an opportunity to test with various file sizes.
This benchmark is a preferred among manufacturers as ATTO uses RAW or compressible data and, for our benchmarks, we use a set length of 256mb and test both the read and write performance of various transfer sizes ranging from 0.5 to 8192kb with a ques depth of 4.

Overall speed seems strong for raw data,with speeds often touching 90+ MB/s for read and write operations.

Crystal Diskmark

Crystal Disk Benchmark is used to measure read and write performance through sampling of highly compressible data (oFill/1Fill), or random data. Crystal DiskMark scores usually drop a bit when comparing to ATTO and this is the result of the testing data now being primarily incompressible representing movies, music and photographs.

Crystal Diskmark also shows same kind of speeds.

lets check out the other benchmarks.

AS-SSD:

Added to the benchmark suite is this nice little German application called AS SSD Benchmark. This test gives an extensive result set. The test is popular, so I included it.AS SSD, for the most part, gives us the worst case scenario in SSD transfer speeds because of its use of incompressible data.I will be using the copy and compression benchmarks from this tool to show some real world data transfer rates.

HD Tune Pro 5.00

HD Tune Pro is a hard disk utility and benchmarking utility for Windows. This tiny application allows you to scan your hard drives for errors or take a deeper look at several performance figures coming from the storage unit.

We used the included benchmark utility.

Speeds will be a bit low since HDtune works with incompressible data.

Aida 64

Aida 64 is one of those multi faced benchmark tools which can help you to benchmark almost all components of a system.

The module we will be using measure access time.

Overall it seems good..maybe not The best but it holds ground.

One may argue why portable HDD’s exist when we have high capacity thumb drives and low powered hard disks.
portable HDD’s fill a specific category where the user need something that has higher capacity of  a traditional HDD along with the portability of thumbdrives,hence the rise of portable HDD’s.
As such we see a constant battle between performance and ergonomics.
the drive we reviewed today is one such example of mix of beauty and performance.

lets list out the Pro’s and Cons..shall we?

Pro’s

  1. Good performance across the boards.
  2. Compact size.
  3. Nice finish.

Cons’

  1. USB 3.0 Cable is a bit short.
  2. The outer side tends to catch a lot of finger prints.(yes,i am nit-picking).
  3. Backup button doesn’t work in all applications.

So all in all we have a drive with good performance and drop dead gorgeous look.its a must have if you love to show off your gadget.

From my side 3.5/5…a few points docked for functional reasons listed above.

A special thanks to ADATA for providing the sample and to my team for supporting me throughout the review.

 

until next time..
Sumon Pathak

 

< Prev Next >
Exit mobile version