infinitemethod
New Member
I've used 2 36gb 10,000rpm WD Raptors in a RAID before and loved it. Storage is not a big deal. Is there a better alternative? Price is roughly $230 for both drives. Thanks.
My question:infinitemethod said:I've used 2 36gb 10,000rpm WD Raptors in a RAID before and loved it. Storage is not a big deal. Is there a better alternative? Price is roughly $230 for both drives. Thanks.
I know, but what are you doing that make you think you can see the differenceThey are 10,000 rpm drives, that's why i love them.
Samples ? fdo you mean a media format. in which case there is 0 difference5 year warranty to boot. sig tells all
keep all my samples on these drives, very fast indeed.. at least compared to an old fashioned 7200rpm ata.
for the frequency of the event, its not worth the cashi can see the difference, especially when installing stuff and uninstalling stuff as well as extracting and recovering
none at allif u are a mega gaming freak i suppose they will give u an advantage
lol, you might have better luck with that. People will see the results they want to see, especially when they payed 3 or 4 times as much as for a regular drive.i give up, let me find a wall to talk to
apj101 said:i give up, let me find a wall to talk to
The spindle speed is by no means the only factor here. http://www.computerforum.com/showpost.php?p=70792&postcount=5I'm curious to how you don't think you see a difference? I guess from a mathmatical stand point, a 7,200 rpm hd compared to a 20,000 rpm hd? I believe it's roughly 40% faster in benchmarks.
Care to back that up?It's just science.
Yep thats what im doing. Getting one WD Caviar 250GB 16MB, Then another later on RAID0. Should be fun!Raid some SATAII drives w/ 16MB cache