Storage Solutions Seagate's answer to WD Green Power drives

Eazy

Skilled
The new Barracuda® LP desktop drives deliver all the benefits of a low-power drive—cool drive savings quiet operation--and the fastest performance in the green drive line-up.

The brand new Seagate® Barracuda® LP (low-power) family is here, designed and built by the desktop performance leader, but with the primary focus on a low-power, cool and quiet drive at an entry-level price. This drive allows users to do more while using less power. The Barracuda LP drives deliver on low power consumption. But low power no longer means slow power. Benchmark performance results prove the 5900-RPM spin speed advantages (when compared to competitor drives that spin at 5400 RPMs). And these drives are cool and easy on the PC, often requiring fewer fans, a smaller power supply and lower maintenance costs. It’s the definition of energy efficiency.

Best For
USB, eSATA and FireWire personal attached storage devices, home and small office networking appliances, low power PCs and for customers who value low power, green drives

Barracuda LP drives are available in capacities of 2 TB, 1.5 TB and 1 TB and are ideal for desktop applications.

Key Features and Benefits
Super-low power consumption reduces power costs over the life of the system up to 50% over those of standard desktop drives
Leading performance in the low power category
Cool drives provide long-lasting benefits to the PC or external drive, reducing some component and maintenance costs.
Delivers true greenness without a performance trade-off
Built to exacting Seagate green standards:
Complies with RoHS directive
Typically 70 percent or more of the materials used to build the drive can be recycled.
Designed, built and delivered using best-in-class, environmentally friendly processes
Engineered by the world leader in desktop hard drives with 13 generations of technology advances

SOURCE: Barracuda LP Hard Drives | Seagate
 
Its not the same one, the model number is different from the one on the seagate website
 
just did the benchmarking on the drive, doesn't looks like a 5900rpm drive

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