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Hack 58 Choose the Fastest Hard Drive
Did you know that the "high performance Brand X" hard drive inside your PC is probably not the highest performance version of the drive that "Brand X" makes? PC manufacturers use the most current disk drive series available from their drive vendor, but typically only the most economical model of that series. Your PC maker buys a select version of the popular disk drive brands, so their "select" or so-called "OEM" components are not necessarily top of the line, even if you think your PC maker is the best in the world.
Often the same basic drive mechanics and electronics are used across different models of disk drives to minimize manufacturing complexities. Then drives are tested to see if they meet maximum, intermediate, or minimal performance specifications, reprogrammed, and then labeled and sold accordingly. This is similar to the practice of CPU and memory makers that sell the same components at different performance and price points to maximize profits from their manufacturing processes (providing many opportunities to overclock and hack more performance from lesser-rated parts). Disk drive models from the same manufacturer, in the same model series, differ either by programmed-in or actual speed and access-time limitations, amount of on-drive data buffering, and even total available drive capacity. Western Digital (http://www.wdc.com) openly lists "High-Performance EIDE," "Mainstream EIDE," and "Value EIDE" drive families with essentially the same capacities but different performance specifications. When you go to buy a disk drive, be sure to check specific model numbers and the labeling on the packaging to be sure you are getting the performance you expect. Unfortunately there are no known ways to hack into disk drives, change their firmware or operating parameters, and gain similar performance improvements as you have seen with hacking CPU and memory speeds. A top-of-the-line model might be available with the following specifications:
The same drive maker's value-line specifications read:
Even though the seek times are the same, and both drives support UDMA Mode 5 or ATA-100 I/O performance to the system interface, you can see from the rotation speed, buffer size, latency, and buffer-to-disk parameters that the value-line disk will be slower than the high-performance model. Why would you want a slower drive in your system? Slower drives are a bit quieter. It's cheaper to make slower drives and reduce the amount of buffer memory; the lower cost of the drive means your total system can be more affordable—but wouldn't you like it to be faster ? The performance of the disk drive makes a significant difference. The disk drive is the slowest critical component in your system. No matter how fast your CPU and RAM are, the system's biggest bottleneck is the disk drive. A faster drive can make a system with a slow CPU speed bootup and work faster than one with a higher CPU speed (even with the same amount of RAM). Look to the specs and buy the best, especially when shopping for a value-priced PC. If it's time to upgrade the disk drive in your second PC, consider buying the best drive you can for your main PC and move its drive to the second PC or an external enclosure—no sense giving your old PC something better than your new one has!
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