Mercury Elite Pro Quad Interface Hard Drive Review
Mercury Elite Pro Quad Interface Hard Drive Review

It wasnât that long ago that a terabyte seemed like an impossibly huge amount of data. But oh how things change. iTunes Match supports large music libraries of up to 25,000 tracks, and with Apple TVâs new support for 1080p HD content, weâre regularly adding Mad Men episodes to our libraries that can be nearly 2GB each. Thankfully, the Mercury Elite Pro offers plentiful storage in a sturdy, versatile package that fits the needs of even the most voracious media consumer.
The driveâs sturdy aluminum enclosure echoes the simple design of late-model Macs. Thereâs a bit of the Mac Proâs âcheese graterâ detailing on the front, which also sports a blue LED activity light. But donât let the minimal design fool youâ"the Quad version we tested includes both flavors of FireWire, a full-size USB port, and even eSATA connectivity. The heavy drive is meant to live on a desk, but itâs nice to have all those connectivity options in case you do need to shuttle between multiple machines.
When it comes to performance, the Mercury Elite Pro lives up to its name. In read and write tests, we achieved speeds of up to 77.3 MB/s and 65.2 MB/s respectively when connected to a Core i5 MacBook Pro via FireWire 800. Our 4TB review unit featured a 5400-rpm, 3.5-inch mechanism, but lower-capacity models feature faster 7200-rpm drives.
Out of the box, the drive came formatted for Mac, and includes copies of Data Backup 3, Carbon Copy Cloner, and InTech Speed Tools on a CD.
The bottom line. When your data needs outgrow your Macâs internal drive, OWCâs Elite Pro has plenty of options for storing all your digital goods.
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