Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc. (TAIS), Storage Device Division introduces the MK1234GAX 2.5-inch 120GB Hard Disk Drive. The MK1234GAX offers the industries highest areal density per platter, at 103.5 gigabits per square inch. The drive's 5400 RPM motor speed, improves system-level performance by as much as 12 percent when compared to 4200 RPM.
This new drive offers enough capacity for portable video recording and editing, with lower power consumption compared to the traditional 3.5-inch HDDs. This functionality provides ideal storage for a range of commercial and consumer notebooks, as well as non-PC applications such as PDAs, printers, copiers, GPS systems and MP3 players. The MK1234GAX is ATA-6 compliant, supporting high transfer rates of up to 100 megabytes per second. This is an OEM Product.
Features:
120GB capacity
Rotational Speed of 5,400rpm
Fluid Dynamic Bearing (FDB) motor drive
9.5mm High
12ms Average Seek Time
ATA-6 Interface
100MB/sec Transfer Rate
8MB Buffer
300,000 MTTF Hours
Specifications:
Brand: TOSHIBA.
Model: MK1234GAX.
Interface: ATA-6.
Capacity: 120GB.
Cache: 8MB.
Average Seek Time: 12ms.
Average Latency: 5.55ms.
RPM: 5400 RPM.
Form Factor: 2.5".
Limited Warranty: One year from invoice date with Directron.com. 30-Day money back from receiving date with 15% restocking fee for non-defective returns on current market price. No credit or refund after 30 days. Customer is responsible for returning defective products including DOA due to manufacturer unless testing is paid before shipping. (cj040207)
Notes: (1) The main concern about the compatibility of a laptop hard drive is the thickness. The most current thickness is 9.5mm. Previously it was 12mm. A thin drive will work as a replacement for a thicker one. However, a thick one, which is no longer available from us, will most likely NOT fit inside a laptop that comes with the thin one. (2) The IDE form factor is virtually the same among all laptop drives on the market. The width of laptop hard drives has been standardized at 2.5". (3) The first and often the most difficult part of upgrading a laptop hard drive is to open the laptop case and gain access to the hard drive. Check our your system manual. If you don't have a manual or yours does not show you how to open the laptop, you'll have to guess where and which screws to open. (4) Toshiba defines a megabyte (MB) as 1,000,000 bytes and a gigabyte (GB) as 1,000,000,000 bytes.