Toshiba 4TB Canvio USB 3.0 external hard drive review
"The 4TB Canvio USB 3.0 fits the bill for anyone who wants a lot of TB
for not a lot of dough. It is reasonably fast and easy to set up and the
bundled software is a decent one."
For
Decent Performance
Great value for money
Solidly built
Against
Noisy
Warms up rapidly
The average price of a 2TB external hard disk drive is dropping rapidly with some models costing under £70 (like the Toshiba 2TB Canvio USB 3.0 external hard drive). It's
only a matter of time before (a) someone actually comes up with an
affordable model that combines two 9.5-mm 2.5-inch drives in one single
enclosure – Seagate already has one but it costs nearly three times more
than a 2TB 2.5-inch model, and (b) 4TB 2.5inch drives appear on the
market. Until then, if you want to store very large
amounts of data cheaply locally without having to use a Network Attached
Storage (NAS) or a server, we'll have to stick to external 3.5-inch
hard disk drives. Details of the drive from the backThose
with the cheapest terabyte for hard-earned cash are 4TB models at the
moment, with certain ones offering a Terabyte for less than £25 (about
$40, AU$45). One of the most affordable models is Toshiba's STOR.E CANVIO 3.5 4TB USB 3.0,
otherwise known as the HDWC240EK3J1 or the Canvio Desk. It costs only
£99.99 (roughly $159, AU$ 183) on Amazon, the same – at the time of
writing – as the similar Seagate STBV4000200 Expansion.
Best cloud storage providers
Design
As
expected, this 3.5-inch external hard drive is big (129 x 42 x 167mm or
5.08 x 1.65 x 6.57inch) and heavy at just over 1Kg. It requires a 24W
external power adaptor which means that you have to be near a mains
power supply to use it. Physically, it is a
rectangular-shaped device that is designed to stand up or sit flat, and
you should be able to stack a couple in the later position should the
need to do so arises. Look at those air ventsUnlike its smaller counterpart, the STOR.e Canvio 2TB 2.5-inch drive, the Canvio Desk doesn't come bundled with the Pogoplug software (and cloud-based storage). You
do however get the NTI Backup Now EZ 3 for free, a goodie worth $40
(about £25, AU$ 46) and with it the ability to backup files offsite as
well as granular restoring capabilities.
Performance
PC Mark 8 rating: 2928
Crystal Benchmark Reads: 173.7Mbps/223.23 IOPS
Crystal Benchmark Writes: 183.4Mbps/447.23 IOPS
The
Toshiba 4TB Canvio drive compensates its bulkiness by a relatively high
transfer rate and rather good performance. The NTFS-formatted drive has
a 7200RPM rotational speed, 32MB buffer cache and offers a stated 14ms
access time. Here's the kicker though, Toshiba doesn't do
a 4TB hard disk drive for consumers and none of its enterprise hard
disk drives match the stated specifications of the Canvio Desk. That
could mean that Toshiba is using someone else's hard disk drive. That
belief is reinforced by the fact that both the 4TB and 5TB models sport
7200RPM spinning speeds compared to 5900RPM for the lower capacity
ones. Lot of holes/slits to allow air to circulateTo make things even more interesting, only one hard disk drive on the market, the WD RE WD4001FYYG
fits the profile (4TB, 3.5-inch, 32MB, 7200RPM). Two issues though: it
is a SAS drive and costs more than twice the STOR.E Canvio. Now
a faster spinning hard disk drive means two things, generally (a) it is
noisier in operation (b) it consumes more power and therefore tends to
be hotter when in use. Unsurprisingly, the Canvio Desk ticks both boxes
and that explains to some extent why the designers added vents.
Verdict
Like
its smaller sibling, this drive is fantastic value for money. It is
affordable, sturdily built, fast and should you need a large capacity
internal hard disk drive, well, you can always pry one open as it is
cheaper – by a huge margin – compared to other internal HDDS on the
market, another paradox of demand and supply. It is a bit noisy but
everything is subjective. There's two reasons though why
one could hold off from buying one of those though. Firstly, the Seagate
4TB costs the same and may well be a better buy – we haven't tested it
yet. Secondly, the 3TB and 5TB models could be good
alternatives depending on whether you want the cheapest price per TB on
the market or the highest portable storage density in that category.