Seagate Technology will this June start shipping a new range of 2.5-inch hard-disk drives for the notebook PC market. The
range contains a number of industry firsts that promise consumers a combination of better performance and storage capacity
compared to the company's existing models, it said at a news conference in Tokyo on Tuesday.
The Momentus-branded hard drive series includes a 120GB drive that spins at 5,400 rpm and a 100GB drive that spins at 7,200
rpm. This is the first time notebook drives with these combinations of rotational speeds and capacities have been announced
by Seagate, according to Mark Walker manager of product marketing at the company.
The new range of drives comes in three series that cover the high-performance, mid-range, and value notebook PC markets respectively,
Walker said.
The 7200.1 series offers drives with 40GB, 60GB, and 80GB capacities as well as the 100GB version. All the drives in this
series run at 7,200 rpm.
The 5400.2 series offers drives at 30GB, 40GB, 60GB, 80GB, and 100GB capacities as well as the 120GB version, and all the
drives run at 5,400 rpm.
The 4200.2 series also has the same six capacities as the 5400.2 series, but the drives run at 4,200 rpm, the company said.
Both the 7200.1 and the 5400.2 series will be available with Parallel ATA or Serial ATA interfaces, while the 4200.2 series
will only be available with the Parallel ATA interface, the company said.
Most notebook drives run at 5,400 rpm and the 7200.1 series drives will offer noticeably better performance for users, Walker
said.
For example, notebook PCs with Seagate's 7200.1 drives will typically boot up Windows XP about 20 percent faster than the
same PCs with the company's 5400.2 series drives, he said.
Performance will come at a price, though. The 7,200 rpm drives will cost about 50 percent more than the company's 5,400 rpm
drives, Walker said. He did not disclose specific prices for any of the drives.
A number of PC vendors including Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Acer, and Lenovo Group are testing the new range of drives, Walker
said.
Seagate hopes these new drives will help the company to triple its share of the growing global market for notebook PC drives
to about 30 percent within three years, Walker said.
As price and performance differences between notebook PCs and older desktop PCs are narrowing, more people are replacing their
desktop PCs with notebook PCs instead of buying desktop PCs, and this trend is boosting demand for 2.5-inch drives.
The number of 2.5 inch drives shipped in 2004 grew nearly 20 percent compared to 2003, and the market should grow about 20
percent again to reach nearly 67 million units this year, Walker said.
Seagate had an 11 percent share of the market for 2.5-inch drives during the first three months of 2005, behind Hitachi Global
Storage Technologies with 34 percent, Fujitsu with 25 percent, and Toshiba with 22 percent, according to estimates provided
by Seagate.
"We are No. 4 right now but we want to be in the top three," Walker said.