The indicator is off when powered down, glows when idle, has a KITT affect when the drives are being accessed and a progress animation if the array is being rebuilt. Internally there are five LEDs that drive the indicator, but from the outside it just looks like a thin strip of light. The front is barren except for a status light. The max drive surface temperature I measured was 51C under extended load. The Studio Edition II chassis is well vented, despite there being no internal fans - slits perforate the top, back and base of the unit. The industrial design is very Apple-like, however the construction is entirely plastic.
With two 3.5" drives inside the My Book Studio Edition II takes up about the desk space as five DVD cases standing upright.
#WD 1TB MY BOOK STUDIO SOFTWARE#
The drive is easily just as usable under Windows and Western Digital of course provides software for that purpose. The MyBook Studio Edition II simply comes from the factory with a HFS+ partition, Mac-like industrial design, Mac compatible software and FireWire 800 support, commonplace on many modern Macs.
#WD 1TB MY BOOK STUDIO PC#
The Mac-ready feature of course means little these days since both Mac and PC platfnorms share almost all of the same components. I saw the drives going for $179 for 2TB, $303 for the 4TB configuration and $379 for the 6TB model at Amazon.īy default My Book Studio Edition II implements a RAID-0 across its two internal drives, although Western Digital's software lets you convert that to a RAID-1 (at half the capacity) if you'd like. The drives are priced at $249, $399 and $499 respectively although street pricing is significantly lower. The two-bay external enclosure features two 3.5" Western Digital Caviar Green drives and is available in 2TB, 4TB and 6TB configurations. While we await more Thunderbolt storage devices, Western Digital grabbed headlines not too long ago for the announcement of its 6TB My Book Studio Edition II Mac-ready external drive.