500 gb hard drives -cheap!

  • Thread starter Thread starter 4phun
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4phun

Has anyone noticed that CompUSA has 500 GB drives for a reasonable
price in today's paper? They say it is an exclusive. Why buy a 300 gb
drive when you can make that a 500 GB upgrade for the same price?
 
4phun said:
Has anyone noticed that CompUSA has 500 GB drives for a reasonable
price in today's paper? They say it is an exclusive. Why buy a 300 gb
drive when you can make that a 500 GB upgrade for the same price?

WD Caviar HD 250GB = $159.99
WD Caviar HD 200GB = $162.99

So why buy 200GB???
 
WD Caviar HD 250GB = $159.99
WD Caviar HD 200GB = $162.99

So why buy 200GB???


Spot-pricing on components can often be inconsistent per
capacity, or speed, or other parameters.

You're considering only the best price between two parts, if
we look at the best prices in general, then lower capacity
drives ARE cheaper. For example,
http://www.compusa.com/products/product_info.asp?product_code=309209&pfp=BROWSE

Seagate 200GB, $140 - $30 - $60 (rebates) = $50

Why pay $110 more for 50GB increase and only a 1 year
warranty instead of 5 years?

Unless you want a specialty drive, like a WD Raptor, or the
largest capacity available at any given moment, it seldom
makes sense to buy any drive at regular price rather than
sale or rebate-discounted price.
 
Has anyone noticed that CompUSA has 500 GB drives for a reasonable
price in today's paper? They say it is an exclusive. Why buy a 300 gb
drive when you can make that a 500 GB upgrade for the same price?

Yeah its always like that. They drastically reduce the price of
anything on sale. One week its 20-50% off the next week its back to
its regular price.

Theres always a sweet spot though. The 160-200 gig drives are in the
sweet spot now.

The Seagate 200 gig is 49 AR. if you could qiualify which you cant of
course sine its one rebate per household you could get 3 of them for
$150 600 gigs vs the $270 price. Of course you would use up 3
connections vs 1 though so thats a disadvantage if you are going for
maximum space like using up slots for memory.
 
Nope - same speed, same controller interface, same manufacturer, same buffer
speed, larger drive is cheaper!

http://www.compusa.com/products/products.asp?N=200112+4294967017+400122+502461+4294966914&Ne=300689


No nope, reread what I wrote and think beyond a simplistic
notion of only two drives... and look around at other
vendors that update their prices more frequently than
Compusa. Seeing a price discrepancy at one of the retail
superstores is not noteworth, is a regular situation with
any kind of technology that depreciates over time because
faster/larger models displace the older ones at similar (or
even lower) price points when first introduced. This is
merely the first time you've noticed such events,
apparently.
 
WD Caviar HD 250GB = $159.99
WD Caviar HD 200GB = $162.99

So why buy 200GB???
Not everyone is a home PC user. The company I work for buys hard
disks by the 1000's and when we select a model we stick with it until
a new one is qualified. CompUSA knows that there are users that need
exact replacements for RAID arrays and companies that standardize and
will only buy exact replacments for what has been the standard. They
also know that the home user is going to get whatever is biggest for
the lowest price so they also cater to that market as well. I for one
would never go out and buy the newest, biggest disk on the market if
my job were on the line. Take the IBM DeathStar fiasco as a case in
point.
 
Not everyone is a home PC user. The company I work for buys hard
disks by the 1000's and when we select a model we stick with it until
a new one is qualified. CompUSA knows that there are users that need
exact replacements for RAID arrays and companies that standardize and
will only buy exact replacments for what has been the standard.

Name a company that buys drives by the 1000's from CompUSA
at retail prices. That scenario is completely unrealistic.
 
Name a company that buys drives by the 1000's from CompUSA
at retail prices. That scenario is completely unrealistic.

We don't buy hard disks in the 1000's from CompUSA, but we do buy hard
disks in the 10's from local retailers like CompUSA when we need
immediate replacements. Their pricing on this type of hardware is
just based on what the current market rates are.

BTW.. Did you know that CompUSA is actually based out of Mexico?
 
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