I was thinking about getting one of the WD Raptor drives, and wanted to know if anyone had any opinions on the 10k rpm. Is the speed difference obvious? Anyone had any problems with them?
5/17/2006 1:26:50 PM
definately worth it for OS drive
5/17/2006 1:32:09 PM
Gotcha. Yeah, 74G seemed a little small for a HD now..
5/17/2006 1:38:36 PM
^ yes, that is true, but don't go buy a 250GB 10k rpm drive. Get a 10k drive big enough for the OS and program files, etc. Then go buy a 7200rpm 250GB drive for music, videos, backup, etc
5/17/2006 2:14:08 PM
It might help if there was actually a 10k rpm SATA drive in existance The Raptor line is up at 150gb now, get that, its faster than the 74 and provides enough storage to be used without buying a secondary storage drive.
5/17/2006 2:46:42 PM
5/17/2006 3:17:44 PM
He's going to make some partially true comment about the drive not being true 10k or something, you watch.
5/17/2006 3:27:31 PM
I think maybe he'll mention that newegg uses SATA to refer to SATA II and Serial ATA150 to refer to SATA/150, even though they're both "SATA." Are we taking bets?[Edited on May 17, 2006 at 3:29 PM. Reason : ]
5/17/2006 3:29:32 PM
we've got a bunch of 146GB 10K and some 15K SAS drives in our test lab, SAS drives are basically a SCSI drive with a SATA connection
5/17/2006 3:31:01 PM
are those the serial attatchable SCSI's? I wasn't really sure what those were, never used any.[Edited on May 17, 2006 at 3:36 PM. Reason : ]
5/17/2006 3:33:54 PM
5/17/2006 3:38:05 PM
whoops! Shit I forgot to throw 250gb in thereIt SHOULD have read:"It might help if there was actually a 10k rpm 250GB SATA drive in existance"Thanks for jumping on me quick guys [Edited on May 17, 2006 at 3:44 PM. Reason : .]
5/17/2006 3:43:54 PM
Haha, you know you'd do the same, but yeah it seemed like that's what you meant anyways.^^ Yeah, SATA I = Serial ATA150 or SATA150 SATA II = SATA300 or Serial ATA300[Edited on May 17, 2006 at 4:00 PM. Reason : ]
5/17/2006 3:58:47 PM
SAS drives are Serial Attached SCSI, and SAS controllers work with both SAS drives and regular SATA drives (they use the same SATA plug). I've got a SuperMicro machine at my feet with an onboard 8 channel SAS controller with 8 250GB 7.2K SATAII drives hooked up to it.
5/17/2006 4:34:53 PM
i have the 74GB raptor and definitly notice a huge difference, i use it for OS, apps, & games. storage is best kept on a larger & more affordable drive[Edited on May 17, 2006 at 6:36 PM. Reason : ,]
5/17/2006 6:36:37 PM
5/17/2006 6:41:48 PM
hey, talking about raptors, anyone there using the 15k ones? are they safe and/or worth it? ($$$)
5/17/2006 7:24:22 PM
Clearly they aren't safe to use.
5/18/2006 9:53:19 AM
^ hahaanything that runs at 15K is clearly Enterprise class, meant for continuous usage, 24/7/356 type shit[Edited on May 18, 2006 at 11:13 AM. Reason : and costs $texas]
5/18/2006 11:13:13 AM
I use 2x of the 36GB Raptors in RAID 0 for my OS. It's definatly noticable and well worth it IMO
5/18/2006 1:40:14 PM
Maybe this is a dumb question, but why hasn't the speed increased to 10k for all HDs? It seems like the technology has been around for a little while. Is there something stopping the transition?
5/19/2006 12:23:23 PM
5/19/2006 12:25:30 PM
^ hahaha, dont you know? HDs get that 2.47% downtime per year, LOL[Edited on May 19, 2006 at 12:53 PM. Reason : fat fingered the numbers]
5/19/2006 12:52:45 PM
5/19/2006 1:03:02 PM
5/19/2006 1:16:06 PM