Seagate Backup Plus Slim Portable Drive Experiences

I was wondering is Mac users general had good experience with the Seagate Backup Plus Slim Portable Drive? I was thinking about getting either the 1TB or 2TB for backup/storage.


It also says it has pre-loaded NTFS driver for the Mac. And the drive can be read by both PC and Mac. How does that work? And does anyone know if it is formatted for Mac OS Extended (Journaled)?


Also, what does journaling actual do. I read a few conflicting threads, it either actively defrags to increase speed and prevent data corruption especially in the case of a power outage or it significantly slows down the disk.

iMac, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.5)

Posted on May 23, 2014 9:54 PM

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11 replies

May 24, 2014 7:10 AM in response to rkaufmann87

I am familiar with OWC products. I had good experience with them. Are not Seagate products decent too? I saw a good deal on a Seagate drive in a store. I was also wondering since EHD can be so slim nowadays, if that ever presented a problem in terms of performance and durability?


So if I do a complete reformat of the Seagate drive using the Apple Disk Utility, it will remove the NTFS driver completely and it will not be dual platform anymore, correct?


General speaking, is NTFS really considered problematic and why?

May 24, 2014 7:57 AM in response to Carlton Chin

Seagate's quality of enclosures do not match those of OWC, while a Seagat drive will work investing a bit more normally results in a product that simply lasts longer, therefore becomeing less expensive in the long term. They are also extremely easy to replace the HD in too, so eventually when the HD fails you simply buy another, slide it in and you are back up and running.


NTFS is designed MS Windows, while OS X can read from it, OS X will not write to it natively however there are some work arounds. The trouble with the work arounds is they tend to be unreliable so while it may work fine one day the next you can have troubles, IMHO steer away from that format.

May 24, 2014 8:27 AM in response to Carlton Chin

That drive is bus-powered, meaning it can get power only from the computer's USB ports. Unless you need small size so you can pack the drive around with you while traveling, consider instead a self-powered drive. If traveling with the drive is not an issue, also consider a larger desktop-type drive that holds a 3.5-inch form factor drive. The larger drives are historically more durable than the 2.5-inch laptop drives as would be installed in the Seagate you linked.


There are a fair number of reports in these forums of bus-powered drives working for a time and then not being recognized. With age, electric motors can demand more power than when new and, if that demand exceeds what a USB port can provide, the drive stops working.


IF you MUST use a laptop-class mobile external on a desktop computer, at minimum consider adding a self-powered USB hub to the purchase. It will overcome any lack of power issues the drive experiences:


NewerTech 7 Port Hi-Speed USB 2.0 Hub with Power Adapter for Mac & PC


OWC makes a mobile, bus-powered drive that can also use an optional power brick--best of both worlds. I have one and like its having a FireWire interface. However, you have a choice of interfaces:


http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/firewire/EliteALmini/eSATA_FW800_FW400_USB

May 24, 2014 8:39 AM in response to Carlton Chin

There is another important thing to consider, besides the power of the EHD: the connector. If your Mac has already USB3, make sure that you buy a USB3 drive, much faster. If your Mac has USB2, your next one will have usb3 !. Do not choose the Firewire connector, incompatible and not faster.

As rkaufmann (🙂) said: do not format as NTFS. Format as Mac OS Extended (journaled): the NTFS drivers iavailable for OSX are not completely free of issues. If you realy want to exchange files with a Windows computer use an USB stick (Fat32). And do NOT install anything that comes with the EHD drive ('smart' software ntfs or other drivers).

As Allan (🙂) said, the best solution is to buy a EHD with its own power, if you have a wall outlet free.

Lex

May 28, 2014 12:16 AM in response to Carlton Chin

Portability is a good choice, buy EHD with the lowest power use, thus the 5400RPM.

I have a 2TB 2.5" WD Elements, which has not even a power connection.

I repeat: do not use any software that came with the disk or can be downloaded for free: that is counterproductive in a mac; and format it before first use to get it clean from the beginning: Mac OS Extended (journaled).

Jul 16, 2015 3:19 PM in response to Lexiepex

Help! I'm in Korea and wanted to download some educational movies for my kids so bought Seagate Backup Plus yesterday to work with MacBook Pro. I can't write to it and now I see why. I thought I reformatted with Mac Installer but it still didn't bring up the dashboard. (Maybe it's because I've completely run out of room on my Mac??) I will only use this on Mac. Can you please give me a link for the appropriate software to make it so I can write onto it?? It looks like it's best to reformat from the beginning as I will only use with Apple product. I'm leaving soon and need to make this expensive purchase work! Thanks so much!!!

Jul 17, 2015 4:00 AM in response to Carlton Chin

In terms of portable hard drives, I have had great luck with Iomega portable drives.

I have several of them around for various purposes including backup and extra

external storage.


I have a couple G-Technology drives as well. However, I think they draw a bit more power

than most. They work okay bus powered on my 2011 Mini Server but were problematic

with my 2010 Mini due to power draw on the bus.


This is just my personal experience, but I would avoid Western Digital external drives like the

plague. Everyone I had ever purchased failed within a year or shortly there after. It was

always the enclosure that was the problem as the HDD itself was okay.


Also as a side note, what ever drive you decide on, if there are any manufacturer utilities

on them, DO NOT INSTALL. There have been many issues of them rendering drives

unreadable or unreliable after OS X upgrades. Besides, they are not really needed anyway.

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Seagate Backup Plus Slim Portable Drive Experiences

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