I'm sure this will prove useful sooner or later, so here it is. Only the post-FDB but pre-unload models are here. While I don't have any inherent problem with the load/unload system (as long as it's properly implemented, and not abused as it is in the “Green” WDs), since those later WDs have four-letter codes in the short model number, you don't need a list like this one to make sure you're getting FDB, if you buy those. The extended part of the model number, at least on the drives concerned, contains two digits, three letters, and another digit – only the letters are important. The concerned drives are split into two "groups": Drives with 2~3 disks, and drives with only a single disk – which have separate casings and are distinguished between.
2—3 × 83GB disks- BB-GUA/GUC
- JB-GVA/GVC
- JD-GBB
- JD-HBB/HBC
- JS-MHB
- KS-MJB
- BB-RDA
- JB-REA
2—3 × 107GB disks- BB-KEA
- JB-KFA
- BD-KKB
- JD-KLB
- JS-PDB
- KS-PFB
Single 80GB disk- BB-JHA/JHC
- JB-JJA/JJC
- BD-JMA/JMC
- JD-JNA/JNC
- BD-LRA
- JD-LSA (these last two are native SATA — 300MB/s, confusingly, so in theory they should've been designated BS-LRA and JS-LSA)
Single 80GB disk, damped cover (otherwise the same as the above group)
- BB-JKA/JKC
- JB-JLA/JLC
- BD-JPA/JPC
- JD-JRA/JRC
- BD-LTA
- JD-LUA
I don't have a huge number of these myself, but have only had one WD400BB-00JHA0 fail to date and that was electronic, not mechanical (a silent failure but I take it that it was the SMOOTH chip). These may have been the finest desktop drives ever made. Other drives struggle in at least one significant area (to elaborate - several competing drives tended to be
+5V hungry, Seagate dropped AAM with 7200.7 and lost their reliability advantage with 7200.8, many Maxtors were even more prone to overheating, and as for Hitachi and Samsung…their reliability is debatable), but these did pretty well in all of them (aside from using SMOOTH chips and lacking unload technology). Too bad they came rather late – leaving the Seagate Barracudas as the best choice from 2001 to 2004.
My previous main PC had two WD800JD-00LSA0s. They are very quiet and work perfectly to date. They only report one CRC error each, and that can be blamed on the busted PSU caps in the PCs I got them from.
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
My PC: Core i3 4130 on GA‑H87M‑D3H with GT640 OC 2GiB and 2 * 8GiB Kingston HyperX 1600MHz, Kingston SA400S37120G and WD3003FZEX‑00Z4SA0, Pioneer BDR‑209DBKS and Optiarc AD‑7200S, Seasonic G‑360, Chenbro PC31031, Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3.