Well not everything went to plan, unfortunately, as the cloning of my OS drive did not/would not work. I used Acronis' clone disc feature and no go... I used another proggie I got from Major Geeks, but that wouldn't/didn't work, either. Turns out I installed this SSD at the right time because the Hitachi HDD housing my OS has died completely. It doesn't show up in the BIOS anymore so I'm figuring it'll become a doorstop somewhere around here.
Anyway, I used up another of my installs and re-wrote Win 7 on my new SSD. It all went smoothly and in record time, with the entire process completing in under 20 minutes... like I went upstairs to make a cuppa and by the time I got back it was done. All I had to do was set the network preference and voila, an up and running OS. Now all I have to do is install all my apps again.
check your warrenty again most drives come with a 3 year or 5 year warrenty standard
I got it in a little plastic packet with no box no info, but I rang the bloke where I bought it and he told me the warranty is 12 months... and no, it's not because he couldn't be bothered. I've been going to this store for the past 9 years and he has never let me down/refused to return goods on warranty. However, I will never purchase another Hitachi HDD, given this experience
The new vertex 3's are twice as fast if you have sata 3 ports!!
No, I only have SATA 2 ports at the moment. However, while I have notice a marked speed increase from before, my primary thought was geared more toward longevity/durability than speed.... and I hope that no moving parts will provide that.
Hello, just a word of warning with SSD - I am a system administrator and we used the OCZ Vertex SSDs in a raid array for an I/O intensive RRD database (basically constant reads and writes across all the data). The disks failed after 3 months of use, becoming unusable for writing. We replaced them with Intel SLC SSD disks, and they are happily running since then.
As sole user of this PC, I don't think I'm going to come anywhere near close to the read/write usage you speak of, and given the experiences of people with the same SSD as mine, I am not too worried about its longevity or over-extending its write capability. Sure all things wear out or die in the end, and I've not had the best of luck with HDD's recently, but I feel this SSD is a step in the right direction.
Welcome to the world of awesome. You'll never go back to mechanical hdd's again.
Not for an OS, at least. They're still too expensive to become data storage vessels as yet, so obviously I will continue using the regular drives as storage and SSD's for OS/boot drives. The thing is, I like what I've seen thus far. Program installations are lightening quick and data transfers seem to be a few kbs faster as well.
hopefully, you won't have any issues with that ocz drive. odds are you won't. their method of tech support is horrible. i switched to a corsair ssd just for that reason.
I have an Australian freecall number to call for support should I need it, so hopefully I do not experience the same low standard as you did. And yeah, let's hope the odds are... that I'll not need to call that number.
My little 60 gig SSD has been on 24/7 for getting on for 2 years .... never missed a beat.
Yours is one of the experiences that I based my decision to go with an SSD rather than a mechanical drive.
And no, it had nothing to do with yrag's considered opinion that you could fuck up anything PC.... and haven't... as yet. 
No, it was because your SSD experience came across to me as one of stability, reliability and great performance. Furthermore, your comments coincided pretty much with many others I'd read about the OCZ drives, so it seemed like a no brainer to me... though I opted for the larger 120gb so as not to feel cramped.
Besides, if yrag is right, and you can fuck up anything PC, then the OCZ nust be one tough little mother......