WD's large-capacity portable hard drives are back with new 6TB models

Daniel Sims

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In brief: Western Digital's 5TB My Passport Ultra is one of our top picks for large-capacity portable storage, and the company recently released the HDD's first significant update in years. Although SSDs are more or less standard now, HDDs can still provide large amounts of cold storage at relatively low prices.

Western Digital's portable 2.5-inch HDDs are now available in 6TB variants. The new models are the highest-capacity portable HDDs currently on the market, as WD's offerings have maxed out at 5TB since 2017.

The company offers the new 6TB capacity in seven variants: the My Passport, My Passport Ultra, the Mac editions of those two, the USB-C My Passport, the WD_Black P10 Game Drive, and the G-Drive ArmorATD. The different drives feature similar specifications with minor connectivity and compatibility differences.

The Ultra editions include USB-C connectivity out-of-the-box with bi-directional USB-C cables at a $20 premium compared to the standard models. The standard Mac version also ships with a USB-C adapter, but its cable is USB-A.

Although only some models carry Mac labels, all of the drives can support macOS. However, the Windows My Passport and My Passport Ultra must be formatted to work on Macs. Using the Mac editions on Windows only requires downloading an HFS+ driver, with no reformatting required. The standard Windows model also supports Chrome OS.

Meanwhile, the USB-C edition, named "Works with USB-C," supports all three operating systems and includes a USB-C adapter for nearly the same price as the standard variants. The primary difference is that it ships pre-formatted to exFAT.

The Game Drive supports Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, and Xbox Series consoles, but only includes a USB-A to Micro-B cable. Users can install and run PS4 and Xbox One games directly from the drive, but PS5 and Xbox Series console titles can only be stored. 100GB games are standard nowadays, so 6TB of storage can help users hold and transfer dozens of modern titles without needing to re-download them.

Finally, the SanDisk Professional G-Drive Armor ATD is the most expensive model due to its durable outer shell, Thunderbolt 3 compatibility, and two included cables. One is bidirectional USB-C and the other is USB-C to USB-A. It supports macOS out of the box and must be reformatted for use on Windows.

All of the 6TB drives feature a roughly 130MB/s sequential read performance and a 5Gb/s transfer rate. The 6TB My Passport and My Passport for Mac retail for $184.99. The Game Drive and USB-C variant are $189.99. The Ultra editions cost $204.99, and the Armor ATD is $229.99. Less expensive versions of all the drives offer 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 5TB of storage.

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That's a lot of data to lose in one go. I'm sure you're more likely to lose the drive than it being damaged, but that's not the point. I like taking movies and TV shows with me on trips so I have a 2TB, but I would never keep anything important in it. I just mine as a sort of portable NAS rather than a hard-drive. Luckily, most laptops still have 2 NVME drives. With the way people talk about right to repair these days you'd think that most laptops cant be opened. Fortunately, that is really only a few manufacturers.

Soldered on LPDDR5 is becoming more common than SODIMMS, which I see as a major problem. Most APU laptops these days come with 16GB of ram that isn't upgradable. LPDDR5 is amazing stuff, but 16GB of soldered on ram is going to be a boon for APUs in the long term.
 
Two things I’m surprised to see released in 2024: an HDD and a 2.5” form factor external device. You could build a much slimmer external SSD… not sure what exactly this product accomplishes.
 
Guys avoid these, tried all of wd hdd-s, their read/write speed never goes beyond 80MB/s even with premium cables, it's just too slow at these capacities, pretty much anything you put on them is "trapped"
 
Two things I’m surprised to see released in 2024: an HDD and a 2.5” form factor external device. You could build a much slimmer external SSD… not sure what exactly this product accomplishes.
And that external SSD wouldn't be 6 TB.

Reminds me of the people who look at laptop users and scoff " all that would fit in a tablet and be more portable".
 
Guys avoid these, tried all of wd hdd-s, their read/write speed never goes beyond 80MB/s even with premium cables, it's just too slow at these capacities, pretty much anything you put on them is "trapped"
Indeed. I can confirm this too. They start with a decent speed but once you fill up even half of the disk, it drops down to 60-80. The other issue is... I got 25 disks (yes 25), all WD, all different kinds... and I lost at least 10 so far. I will never buy another WD USB disk ever again.
 
Guys avoid these, tried all of wd hdd-s, their read/write speed never goes beyond 80MB/s even with premium cables, it's just too slow at these capacities, pretty much anything you put on them is "trapped"
Indeed. I can confirm this too. They start with a decent speed but once you fill up even half of the disk, it drops down to 60-80..
I have one, but I think it's just mine that's slow..
does this apply to all types of WD HDD..? internal or external type..?


 
Indeed. I can confirm this too. They start with a decent speed but once you fill up even half of the disk, it drops down to 60-80. The other issue is... I got 25 disks (yes 25), all WD, all different kinds... and I lost at least 10 so far. I will never buy another WD USB disk ever again.

Lol..

Fool me once, shame on you.

Fool me 10 times, shame on....
 
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