LaCie Little Big Disk Thunderbolt review
Hideously expensive, but the combination of Thunderbolt and two SSDs makes for some of the fastest file transfer speeds we’ve ever seen
Thunderbolt could be the next big thing in storage technology, but until now its adoption has been restricted to the Apple’s latest-generation MacBook and iMac products. Now motherboard manufacturers such as Asus and MSI are releasing boards with built-in Thunderbolt ports and more firms, such as LaCie, are unveiling accessories that work on both Macs and PCs.
The Little Big Disk is the first external hard drive in LaCie’s range to include Thunderbolt and, with two 240GB SSDs installed in its tough-feeling aluminium frame, it’s well-placed to exploit the 10GB/s theoretical speed that Thunderbolt offers. The SSDs in question are mainstream Intel 320-series drives, and the Little Big Disk itself has two Thunderbolt ports on its rear, so multiple devices can be daisy-chained together, SCSI-style.
The drive didn’t disappoint in our benchmarks. In the large file write benchmark it scored 212MB/s, following this up with a mammoth 564MB/s in the large file read test – the best indicator we’ve yet seen of Thunderbolt’s potential speed.
The LaCie also performed well in our small file tests, although it didn’t match its large file performance. A result of 132MB/s in the small file write test is particularly impressive, with this figure dropping to 61MB/s in the small file read benchmark.
Those figures were recorded in RAID 0 mode, which stripes the data so 222GB of formatted space is available across the two Intel SSDs. The LaCie drive also supports RAID 1 mode, which mirrors the contents of one drive across the other – so there’s only 111GB to play with, but your data will survive the failure of one disk.
Thunderbolt is a new technology, though, and that comes at a price. The 240GB version of the Little Big Disk, with its two Intel SSDs, costs over £550. That’s even more than you’d pay for a 6TB NAS and over three times the price of a 2TB USB3 disk such as the Western Digital My Passport 2TB, but the Western Digital disk only has a tenth of the Thunderbolt LaCie’s file transfer speeds.
If you regularly work with large files such as raw high-definition video and need lightning-quick transfer speeds to avoid delays in the workplace, the LaCie is a luxury that might pay off. The rest of us, though, should wait until the price of Thunderbolt devices begins to fall.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Rating | **** |
Storage | |
Hard disk | Intel 320 Series SSD |
Capacity | 120GB+120GB |
Formatted capacity | 222 |
Price per gigabyte | £2.38 |
Disk size | 2.5in |
Interface | Thunderbolt |
Power connector | External |
Cache | N/A |
Seek time | N/A |
Weight | 650g |
Size | 85x40x140mm |
Power consumption idle | 7W |
Power consumption active | 11W |
Buying Information | |
Backup software included | Genie Timeline Pro |
Price | £573 |
Warranty | three years RTB |
Supplier | http://www.misco.co.uk |
Details | www.lacie.com |