Thats a great way Franko, I like that idea, kinda wonder if you have issues with the 1TB drives, with the amount of heat they generate I never bought them.
Thanks, Tim. They don't generate any more heat than lesser capacity drives, speed up and slow down as needed to save energy (even lesser heat). When you think about it, they use less energy per GB of storage. Video cards generate significantly more, hence heatsinks and cooling fans on them.
Dust and Cooling tip: I also installed an additional intake fan on each PC with a filter on the intake side -- creates a positive pressure to help keep out dust, works with the power supply's exhaust fan (actually quiets it down a bit because it does not work as hard to suck the air from inside the case to the outside). Less dust creeps into the PC's case, especially through the diskette, CD/DVD drives.
A MicroCenter opened up locally and, for a while, they had the lowest price Hitachi (formerly IBM) 1TB drives for $29 with a coupon (downloadable for home printing). Picked up six of them over a two week period. This PC has two of them. Another I'm building has three, which will be my 11 y.o. son's gaming/home computer but will be used for video and photo editing. One spare.
Another tip: After partitioning your primary drive so the C: drive (100 GB is PLENTY) contains the OS and apps, use a freeware program like SelfImage or DriveImage_XML to create images of your:
1. Freshly installed OS and apps
2. Installed OS and apps updated (with latest patches and updates)
3. Installed OS and apps updated, with new apps
Store the images on the same drive but in another partition, or for higher level backup (e.g., hard drive failure), on a separate hard drive altogether. The next time a nastyware (or wife) disables your PC, you can choose the level at which to restore your system from the drive images above. This method takes less time and is, truly, a fresh install as compared to the method using system restore points. Take notes/create logs... I use Notepad to create text files which can be opened by any OS, word processor, or freeware text editor/reader.
Remember to store your files, data, photos, videos, etc., on another partition or hard drive. You can use the same drive imaging utility to back these up, too.