Prospero All American 11662 Posts user info edit post |
hilarious flash animation from hitachi http://www.hitachigst.com/hdd/research/recording_head/pr/PerpendicularAnimation.html
[Edited on October 13, 2006 at 1:24 PM. Reason : flash] 10/13/2006 1:23:56 PM |
FanatiK All American 4248 Posts user info edit post |
that's seriously about 2 years old 10/13/2006 1:28:42 PM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
How does the performance of the perp drives compare to the Raptors?
Basically, I am running a W2K box with an Athlon 64 processor, 2 gigs dual channel 512Mx4 (and yes they run at ddr400 with slightly relaxed timings) and a sluggish most likley ata133 OS drive.
I'm thinking about buying an X2 processor and a new drive (maybe raptor) and either going to XP or something like Unbuntu. The thing that has prevented me from upgrading thus far is all I really do with my current machine is browse the web, play tunes, and watch TV shows. For awhile, I was ripping my DVD and CD collection to disk, but I don't have that task any more.
Will I see a worthwhile speedup from boot to opening windows and doing a few differnet things at once to warrant the 2-400 dollars for these new components? 10/13/2006 2:38:38 PM |
FanatiK All American 4248 Posts user info edit post |
I dont think you get that much real-life performance boost out of these.
The tech was mostly developed to enable more storage in the same sized drives. 10/13/2006 2:55:14 PM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
Closer spaced bits means for a given RPM, more bits are read in a given amount of time.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060418-6622.html
Quote : | "Along with increasing the sheer number of bits that can be stuffed into a hard drive's phone booth, perpendicular recording also should provide performance benefits as well. Since the bits are packed more tightly on the drive platter, data can be read more quickly given the same rotation speed. In addition, seek times for certain searches should drop, resulting in a lower average measurement." |
http://www.tomshardware.com/2006/06/29/seagate_750_gb_barracuda_enters_the_big_league/page9.html
Quote : | "This is where we may begin to see some benefit from the perpendicular recording process. In terms of read transfer rates, of these three drives the Seagate has one of the most impressive scores, surpassing all contenders save the Raptor WD1500AD." |
10/13/2006 3:20:00 PM |
FanatiK All American 4248 Posts user info edit post |
right... theoretically
notice I prefaced my statement with "real-life"
similar to the way RAID arrays kick major ass in benchmarks, but don't really do all that much to boost your day-to-day performance. 10/13/2006 3:43:10 PM |
Noen All American 31346 Posts user info edit post |
I'd go with two perp drives in raid, and forget the raptors. way more storage and negligable performance difference for desktop use 10/13/2006 3:46:44 PM |
Prospero All American 11662 Posts user info edit post |
if you want the max speed/storage for the price than yes.
only problems w/ RAID is a lot more likely chance for corruption of data, when that happens it's harder to recover, increased wear/tear on two drives instead of one, and increased CPU utilization (tho minimal)... and that's why i have both the raptor and a RAID array, i'd rather have one hard drive for the OS and use RAID for gaming, video, swap, temp/storage.
and fyi, this thread wasn't about the perpendicular technology 'per say' but about the animation... if this animation is 2 years old, sorry.
[Edited on October 13, 2006 at 4:48 PM. Reason : ..] 10/13/2006 4:45:20 PM |
Bakunin Suspended 8558 Posts user info edit post |
yo, I'm pretty sure a Raptor spanks the fuck out of any SATA drive featuring perpendicular recording currently available. I was pretty sure of it before I just wasted 15 minutes reading benchmarks, but now I'm damn sure. The 150GB Raptor would have noticably (as in, so much so, that it was noticable to the user) superior performance undergoing certain access patterns (most commonly, booting the OS), and statistically greater performance in virtually every metric but capacity. The 10K spindle RPM results in a lower rotational latency, which directly results in greater random I/O performance. For what it's worth, the 150GB Raptor also has a significantly higher peak linear transfer rate (well over 80MB/sec) than any SATA* perpendicular drive I've seen (60-70 MB/sec) on account of the 10K speed and in spite of it's lower areal density.
[Edited on October 13, 2006 at 7:51 PM. Reason : *the Cheetah 15K.5 with perpendicular recording, on the other hand, is a beast at 135MB/sec ] 10/13/2006 7:49:24 PM |
Prospero All American 11662 Posts user info edit post |
noen and i were referring to RAID 0 array, not just one perpendicular drive.
in my benchmarks the raid array won every area but random access, with 7.8ms, my raptor nearly halfed my raid array (13ms)
[Edited on October 14, 2006 at 12:04 AM. Reason : 0] 10/14/2006 12:03:34 AM |
Bakunin Suspended 8558 Posts user info edit post |
lol wait, a serious discussion of the merits of a RAID-0 volume as primary data storage is occuring?
good luck with that guys
RAID-1, RAID-5, or single disk volumes... if you don't believe me now, please imagine a little me on your shoulder laughing his ass off when do you do (and you will) 10/14/2006 12:08:47 PM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
I don't see the problem with a raid-0 array. 10/14/2006 5:15:30 PM |
agentlion All American 13936 Posts user info edit post |
^ as your primary storage, a non-backed up RAID0 will double your chance of losing all your data from a single HDD failure. 10/14/2006 5:30:58 PM |
bous All American 11215 Posts user info edit post |
2+1 10/14/2006 6:21:20 PM |
Prospero All American 11662 Posts user info edit post |
i use the raptor for primary means of storage, not RAID 0, for the same reasons i posted earlier, read carefully. 10/14/2006 10:45:50 PM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
Has anyone ever seen a Raptor drive on rebate, or sale? 10/17/2006 2:11:22 PM |
quagmire02 All American 44225 Posts user info edit post |
i doubt most of you do anything that would warrant a raptor 10/17/2006 2:20:50 PM |
Arab13 Art Vandelay 45180 Posts user info edit post |
they gots to gets to their pr0n and that armor upgrade before anyone else! 10/17/2006 2:27:06 PM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
Yea, but I have money to burn and I want the fastest shit. 10/17/2006 3:10:00 PM |
agentlion All American 13936 Posts user info edit post |
you have a g/f now. how is it possible you have money to burn! 10/17/2006 3:24:37 PM |
State409c Suspended 19558 Posts user info edit post |
[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 3:26 PM. Reason : nope]
10/17/2006 3:26:11 PM |
Stein All American 19842 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Has anyone ever seen a Raptor drive on rebate, or sale?" |
I'm waiting on a rebate back on my Raptor.10/17/2006 5:39:31 PM |
Prospero All American 11662 Posts user info edit post |
yes, i got my 74gb for $129 or something when they had $20 off on a rebate (or something close i think)... msrp is $149 so that sounds right.
i totally use my raptor on a regular basis for gaming/graphics/video 10/17/2006 11:44:41 PM |
AntecK7 All American 7755 Posts user info edit post |
you know for the amount of time people talk about how long boot up takes, i would think everyone was still running winme and crashign ever 5 minutes 10/19/2006 7:51:17 AM |