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News Seagate drops warranties to three years

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by CardJoe, 15 Dec 2008.

  1. CardJoe

    CardJoe Freelance Journalist

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  2. bubsterboo

    bubsterboo What's a Dremel?

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    I thought the reason why a lot of people liked buying seagates was because of the 5 year warranty.

    Now what's going to convince me to buy a seagate over a samsung, hitachi, or WD for consumer drives?
     
  3. Kúsař

    Kúsař regular bit-tech reader

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    Hmm...perhaps reliability? None of my Seagate HDDs failed me yet. It's always better if you don't have to RMA your HDD. Losing warranty on HDD is one thing. Losing data on HDD another.
     
  4. steveo_mcg

    steveo_mcg What's a Dremel?

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    None of my Maxtor drives ever failed (in their useful life time) and my deskstar deathstar only failed after 4 years of home server use. Every one has tales of unreliable hard disks for every brand but few have the experience of lots of different drives from lots of manufactures to actually show one brand is more reliable than another. TBH i'd rather have the silence and speed of the spinpoint.
     
  5. Pookeyhead

    Pookeyhead It's big, and it's clever.

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    Despite what they may give as the reason, they clearly feel a need to reduce the period to 3 years, and there must be a reason for it. If they perceive no demonstrable reason for doing so, they would not have done so, as a 5 year warranty is a clear reason to buy one (all other things being equal). Every decision of this nature ever made is driven by costs, and cutting the warranty period will save them money. You don't have to be a genius to work out that the 5 year warranty was costing them too much - so they got rid of it. Simple.


    Having said that, the 7200.8s in my wife's PC are still absolutely fine after nearly 5 years.
     
  6. mclean007

    mclean007 Officious Bystander

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    But the shortening of the warranty period could be seen as Seagate degrading its confidence in its consumer drives. Personally I think this is a mistake - how many consumers actually RMA a drive between 3-5 years after purchase? I would guess not many - most will either have junked the entire machine by then or will just take the opportunity to replace the drive with a higher capacity one. HDDs are not expensive to replace - I know I would never be able to dig out the receipt for a 5 year old disk to send it back, and I wouldn't bother anyway - just pull it and drop in a new, faster, larger disk for about £50. The thing that would bother me (if I didn't have a proper backup regime) would be data loss, which is invariably excluded from warranties anyway.

    My only thought is this is an accountancy exercise - if the drives are in warranty for 5 years, that is a potential liability on Seagate's books that has to be carried for 5 years. If instead they can write off that liability after 3 years, there may be some benefit.
     
  7. devdevil85

    devdevil85 What's a Dremel?

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    I bought my mom a Seagate Momentus 7200.3 laptop drive because of the 5-year warranty. Considering it died 4 months afterwards, I can only say I'm happy that it came w/ a 5-year warranty. As for them dropping it, I think they did it because they aren't confident that their drives will last that long, and they will be losing customers because of it.
     
  8. mclean007

    mclean007 Officious Bystander

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    But if it died after 4 months, it would have been covered by a 3 year or even a 1 year warranty, right? Chances are there was some latent manufacturing failure that manifested after 4 months. From my experience, electronic equipment is far more likely to break in its first month than at any later time, and if it lasts a year, chances are it will last until it becomes obsolete because the technology has moved on. This is part of the reason why consumer electronics stores make SO much money out of extended warranties - if the thing dies within a year, it goes back to the manufacturer; if it lasts a year, it is likely it will outlast the overpriced extended warranty.

    Personally, I don't mind much - chance of me returning a defunct drive after 3-5 years is slim - I'd be much more inclined just to put a nail through it (in case anyone fancied reviving it to steal my oh-so-important personal information), junk it, and buy a new one. I'd be much more concerned about any data lost (hence why I back up zealously), which wouldn't be covered by warranty anyway.
     
  9. salesman

    salesman Minimodder

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    Actually I just replaced my seagate HDD a 7200.9 250gig which I bought back in 2006 and all I had to do was go the the seagate website, pack it up, pay like $8 something for shipping and I got my replacement in less than 2 weeks. I don't think dropping it back to a 3 year warranty is going to burst my bubble. I knew it was about to die too vista keep telling me there were problems with the drive so I didn't have important on there unless I had it backed-up.
     
  10. devdevil85

    devdevil85 What's a Dremel?

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    If that's the case, then why not continue with the 5-year warranty to differentiate your product from the competition especially if the risks are so small?

    I mean, the warranty was the reason I bought their drive over the competition, and would've probably been the same reason for a later PC build down the road....either way this looks bad IMO....
     
  11. HourBeforeDawn

    HourBeforeDawn a.k.a KazeModz

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    ehh I never based my purchasing decision on warranty but on performance, noise, and feedback so ehh this doesnt matter to much to me.

    Also ha lol I have that exact same hard drive being shown in that picture, its displayed on my shelf, awesome. ^__^
     
  12. samkiller42

    samkiller42 For i AM Cheesecake!!

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    As Pookey pointed out, it's due to costs. I'm sure you have read the news Devdevil that the world is in a global credit crysis, companies are cutting back on things, some are cutting jobs, others are finding other ways of reducing their costs, Seagate have chosen to reduce the length of the warranty on it's HDD's over cutting jobs, It has nothing to do with the reliabilty of it's HDD's, Seagate is a well known brand, like WD, and with that, people spread the word regarding the reliablity and dependability of the brands and their products. Personally, it's a move i would prefer, because loosing a job at this time of year is a real bummer.

    Sam
     
  13. Mr T

    Mr T 4 Left Into Long 3 Right

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    Mechanical disks will probably be only a small %age of the market in 3 years let alone 5. Maybe they don't want to have to give you a SSD in 5 years time ;)
     
  14. bubsterboo

    bubsterboo What's a Dremel?

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    Yes, but who's to say samsung, hitachi, or WD don't have equal if not greater reliability on their modern lineup?

    Ive personally found samsung to be my #1 choice for reliability based on my experience.
    Anyways it's hard to judge reliability on HDDs. Any hard drive you buy could fail within a year, or last many many years. Thus a nice big warranty is very favorable.
     
  15. The_Beast

    The_Beast I like wood ಠ_ಠ

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    Ehh couldn't really careless
     
  16. Sparrowhawk

    Sparrowhawk Wetsander

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    Well, I'd heard rumors that some of the Chinese-made Seagates were not as reliable as older Seagates. But like all rumors, a small dosage of NaCl is required to be administered orally.
     
  17. MasterCATZ

    MasterCATZ What's a Dremel?

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    I have never had an Faild seagate
    (I do not count anything below 20 gig those Drives where **** :p) ( I have had failed WD after a few days )

    but always got seagate because of the 5 yr waranty so I could re sell the drives 2-3 yrs later with waranty still attached

    With cheaper Brands Avail I might switch after my last 5 yr batch of 1 tb drives ( WD has 2tb HDD's where are Seagates :S )

    WD Greens are looking tempting and about 5% Cheaper
    ( Home File server need low power usage The Raid Arrays give me the speed I need :p )

    ... but I do have a pile of el cheapo Samsungs (10% Cheaper) floating about from the Desperate need of quick space
    (only thing the local shops sell .. damn cheap ass's :p )
     
  18. sui_winbolo

    sui_winbolo Giraffe_City

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    Eh, I don't think I'll buy Seagate HDDs. Dropping warranty by 2 years is a big deal. Just kind of puts it in my head that Seagate might be cutting corners. :(
     
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