Maxtor OneTouch 4 Mini (160GB)

By Dong Van Ngo on 09/11/2007

More Seagate reviews , RRP: AU$199.00

The good:

  • Fast write speeds
  • Comes with backup and restore software
  • Compact size makes it easy to tote around
  • Generous five year warranty

The bad:

  • Restore software doesn't work with Macs
  • Backup software is too basic for power users

The bottomline:

The Maxtor OneTouch 4 Mini is a great option for working on the go, with fast write speeds as well as backup and restore software.

Buying choices:

Editors' rating:

7.8/10

Users' rating:

7.5/10

Like the name suggests, the Maxtor OneTouch 4 Mini is the tiniest member of the OneTouch 4 family of external hard drives. The OneTouch 4 Mini is indeed small. Its size and the fact that it's bus-powered make it a perfect companion for your laptop as a backup or storage extension. It's a fast data writer and comes with backup and restore hardware. It comes in three capacities: 80GB (AU$119), 120GB (AU$149), and 160GB (AU$199).

Similar to all hard drives in Maxtor's OneTouch 4 series, the Mini comes with Maxtor SafetyDrill backup software. The software has a document synchronisation feature that's very useful when you want to make sure both your desktop and your laptop (or any set of two computers) have the same set of data. Aside from document syncing, you can also set up regular document backups or image your PC's entire hard drive. If the PC's drive should fail, you can restore it with the included restore software (the restore software works with Windows only). While very simple and effective, the Maxtor SafetyDrill software doesn't allow for complete freedom in regard to which folders/partition you want to include in the backup. You can't include other folders in your profile other than My Documents and Desktop, and the hard drive has to be imaged in its entirety where all partitions are included in the backup. Nevertheless, we found the software suitable for most home users for day-to-day backup.

The Maxtor OneTouch 4 Mini was very fast in CNET Labs' tests. It wrote our 10GB folder of mixed file types in just 9 minutes, 44 seconds, and read back the same folder in 8 minutes, 59 seconds. Of the portable hard drives we've tested over USB connections, the OneTouch 4 Mini was the fastest. Like the OneTouch 4 Plus, however, it was the slowest at reading, though not by much.

Portable hard drive read/write tests
(Shorter bars indicate faster performance)
Read  
Write  
LaCie Rugged All-Terrain HD (FW400)
10:25 
09:24 
Maxtor OneTouch 4 Mini (USB)
08:59 
09:44 
Iomega eGo (USB)
08:11 
09:54 
Seagate FreeAgent Go (USB)
08:38 
10:33 
Toshiba USB 2.0 Portable HDD (USB)
08:56 
17:42 
Western Digital Passport (USB)
08:42 
20:00 

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sneakers
17/03/2008, 01:54 AM

rating
6
/10

the WD passport time test here is not reliable. i have used both passport and onetouch 4 mini and they do not differ much on read and write speeds. its just a hassle that a USB Y-cable is not readily available anywhere and the Maxtor OneTouch 4 Mini is just way too hungry for power. WD Passport only requires a standard USB-to-mini cable.

Pros: fast, 5yr warranty, one click backup, professional design, includes maxtor manager software

Cons: power hungry, requires 2 USB ports

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Michael Chapman
30/11/2007, 06:09 PM

rating
9
/10

What a neat little external hard drive... The 120gb unit cost me $140Au. It hums along on a USB2 interface with its 8Mb buffer and 5400rpm spindle. The software is simple to use but allows 'OneTouch' byte-wise backups of your internal drives, hard file password protection, etc, etc

Pros: A fast, elegant 2.5" external drive with very generous five-year warranty.

Cons: It's a very quiet drive but I've always preferred to be able to hear my voice coils actuate!

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