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View Full Version : Never seen one of these before... TriGem hard drive?


primesuspect
25 Sep 2003, 3:44am
I've taken apart hundreds if not thousands of computers throughout my career, and I have seen just as many hard drives.

But when I opened a customer's 466mhz E-Machine the other day, I was shocked to see something I had never seen before: A hard drive brand that I've never heard of....

TheSmJ
25 Sep 2003, 3:53am
It could possibly be a subsidiary of a larger HDD manufacturer. One that distributes to E-Machine, Gateway, and the like.

Anyways, the name "TriGem" rings a bell, but I cannot put my finger on where/what I've heard the name.

Geeky1
25 Sep 2003, 3:53am
I've seen 'em before... A 500MHz Celeron HP I took apart a while back had one...

Camman
25 Sep 2003, 3:54am
TriGem is the Korean parent company of eMachines i believe, not positive, but I thought thats what I remember, there was a TriGem drive in my old 366mhz emachine.

Or it could be just the company that emachines buys parts from, but I know they make some video and motherboards as well.

Geeky1
25 Sep 2003, 3:58am
Don't think so. If that were the case, they'd probably use TriGem motherboards, and their newer AMD models have FIC boards in them. I believe TriGem is just one of the generic OEMs...

RWB
25 Sep 2003, 4:05am
Trigem just puts their sticker on other peoples stuff is all, then resells them :P

I used to open up COmpaqs all the time with stickers covering stickers of the ACTUALL maker.

CaffeineMe
25 Sep 2003, 4:19am
Found this:

"8. Samsung also known as Trigem in E-machines (Inexpensive, you get what you pay for!) Cheaply made, consumer use only but do a religious backup!"

At http://www.driveservice.com/bestwrst.htm

Mt_Goat
26 Sep 2003, 7:47pm
CaffeineMe

Good find!

Did anyone else look at their "List"? I'm not sure how far I agree with them on that.

SimGuy
26 Sep 2003, 7:55pm
I agree with some points on that list. Seagate drives, especially their Barracuda-line, have the lowest RMA rate out of any other drive manufacturers. Couple that with almost silent performance, 8 MB buffers and ATA/133 and you've got a winning drive. Seagate also makes very competitive SATA-150 drives.

The only down side: Price. Seagate's are usually more expensive than their Maxtor/WDC/Fujitsu/Hitachi counterparts.

However, this list looks quite old. Hell, they don't even mention the Cavair SE "JB" lineup of WD drives, or the Maxtor DiamondMax D740-XL's or DiamondMax-9's.

Geeky1
26 Sep 2003, 8:01pm
Simguy, that's interesting, because in the computers at the office, my dad's had more problems with seagate drives than with any other brand...

SimGuy
26 Sep 2003, 8:05pm
Ive got a Seagate 427 MB HDD running in one of my 24/7 domain controller system's that was manufactured in 1990. It's still going strong today. No bad sectors. No wierd noises.

It's way past it's MTBF rating and hasn't let up since.

In any server system that I've custom built for businesses, I only utilize the Seagate Barracuda drive's simply because they do not fail as often as other drives. Out of 15 servers I've built for businesses, not one Seagate drive has had to be RMA'd. The oldest one has been out in the field for nearly 24 months.

Geeky1
26 Sep 2003, 8:07pm
Hmm... just luck of the draw I guess. Either that or it's because the company he bought the computers from didn't set them up very well (no thermal pad between cpu and heatsink on a p3-600, no drive cooling, etc.) :rolleyes:

TheLostSwede
26 Sep 2003, 8:16pm
Is that RMA rate based on percentage? I would like to see the amount of rma´s (in hundreds) together with the amount sold instead. That would give a much better picture of it all.

IBM would lead that stats if it was presented like that.

Mt_Goat
26 Sep 2003, 8:23pm
I wasn't questioning Seagate at the top but it just looked kida weird with WD and Maxtor down at the bottom. I agree it must be old and if you think back maybe 4 years or so that would be about right!

Enverex
26 Sep 2003, 9:05pm
I have a Seagate Baracuda II, Medalist, Old Medalist and a Marathon (very, very old 840MB drive) and they are all still running perfectly and have been used for many, many years and none have even one bad block/sector.

NS

topherice
28 Sep 2003, 10:57am
Checked out and older eMachine that a friend has w/ Celeron 366. It has a TriGem mobo. I guess they make all sorts or cheap $hit.

WuGgaRoO
28 Sep 2003, 2:58pm
the maxtor 80gigs were a joke...between me and my friend...we RMA'd atleast 7 of these badboys because of the clicking problem...whatever the hell that means...why does a harddrive click neways

Enverex
28 Sep 2003, 3:00pm
WuGgaRoO said
the maxtor 80gigs were a joke...between me and my friend...we RMA'd atleast 7 of these badboys because of the clicking problem...whatever the hell that means...why does a harddrive click neways

Been running a Maxtor 80GB in my server for a while now. No clicking there, but it is the 2MB version, not 8.

Guessing the clicking is the head moving somewhere it shouldn't.

NS

Geeky1
28 Sep 2003, 8:51pm
Clicking doesn't bother me anymore. My IBM SCSIs click ALL the time and the oldest one is going on 6 years now. Zero bad sectors (although since I DROPPED it the other day, I dunno anymore)