Product Details
Western Digital 250 GB Scorpio Blue SATA 5400 RPM 8 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Notebook Hard Drive WD2500BEVS

Western Digital 250 GB Scorpio Blue SATA 5400 RPM 8 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Notebook Hard Drive WD2500BEVS
From Western Digital

Price: $139.95

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Ships from and sold by Mega Micro Devices Inc.

6 new or used available from $59.90

Average customer review:

Product Description

WD Scorpio 2.5-inch drives offer fast performance and low power consumption, making them ideal for notebooks and other portable devices. WD Scorpio can help meet your portable storage needs with increased capacity.


Product Details

  • Brand: Western Digital
  • Model: WD2500BEVS
  • Format: CD
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .37" h x 2.75" w x 3.94" l, .26 pounds
  • Memory: 0MB
  • Hard Disk: 250GB
  • Processors: 1

Features

  • 250 GB 2.5-inch SATA hard drive with low power consumption and quiet operation; ideal for notebooks and other portable devices
  • 5400 RPM spin speed; 12 ms access time
  • ShockGuard technology protects drive from shocks; SecurePark features increase drive life and performance
  • Holds up to 71,000 digital photos; 62,000 MP3 files; 6,200 uncompressed CD-quality songs; 19 hours digital video; 100 hours DVD-quality video
  • 3-year limited warranty

Customer Reviews

Plug and Play5
I got this to upgrade my PS3. It was E.Z.!

I now have HD videos stored on my main drive, with thumbnail previews.

One happy Geek here!

Turn your 40GB PS3 into a 250GB one for the same price as a 80GB..

Got it for my PS35
Good hardrive... I bought it for my PS3 and it is working AWESOME! I had an original 60GB PS3. I was running out of space quick. I have a lot of my DVD collection on the PS3 for quick access and this gives me plenty more room.

Great PS3 upgrade5
I purchased this drive as an upgrade for my 40GB PlayStation 3. The upgrade went smoothly, and the PS3 had no trouble recognizing the drive.

When it is just spinning or idling, this drive is extremely quiet. When the drive seeks (reads/writes), you can just hear it. For most people this shouldn't be a problem, but if you demand absolute silence, you may want to look at a smaller drive.