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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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03/27/24 | Amazon | $279.99 |
0 |
03/27/24 | Newegg | $280 |
6 |
03/25/24 | Amazon | $265.99 |
9 |
03/25/24 | B&H Photo Video | $280 popular |
24 |
11/26/23 | B&H Photo Video | $279.99 |
1 |
11/24/23 | Amazon | $277 |
1 |
11/23/23 | Newegg | $280 |
2 |
10/10/23 | Western Digital | $280 frontpage |
96 |
09/06/23 | Amazon | $299.99 popular |
11 |
07/12/23 | Amazon | $299.99 |
5 |
03/31/23 | Amazon | $280 |
4 |
03/31/23 | Amazon | $280 frontpage |
45 |
12/26/22 | Amazon | $310 |
14 |
12/26/23 | Newegg | $280 frontpage |
92 |
Product Name: | WD 20TB Elements Desktop External Hard Drive, USB 3.0 external hard drive for plug-and-play storage - WDBWLG0200HBK-NESN |
Manufacturer: | Western Digital |
Model Number: | WDBWLG0200HBK-NESN |
Product SKU: | B09VCXWPQG |
UPC: | 718037894546 |
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There's a point where the drives are small enough (say, up to 5tb) where they're not the best cost/TB because you've got to pay for the basic overhead involved in creating, packaging, marketing and selling the device overall. That controller and that housing cost something, too. And then there's a point where drives get huge, are harder to manufacture, have a more niche audience and serve a more specialized need -- say 16tb-plus -- and so you pay a premium.
The sweet spot tends to be around 8-14TB, depending on sales and the winds of change in the market.
But if you don't and won't need that much, paying more for a better cost/TB ratio still doesn't make sense. And if you know you need more in a single drive for your use case, then there's some value specific to your scenerio you may be willing to pay for.
Cost/TB isn't everything.
The sweet spot tends to be around 8-14TB, depending on sales and the winds of change in the market.
But if you don't and won't need that much, paying more for a better cost/TB ratio still doesn't make sense. And if you know you need more in a single drive for your use case, then there's some value specific to your scenerio you may be willing to pay for.
Cost/TB isn't everything.
Buddy these people are data hoarding. They have a problem and don't understand it.
If/when enough people don't buy a product then the prices have to go down further
If/when enough people don't buy a product then the prices have to go down further