I'm a little surprised that 5400 rpm is around.
The faster the rpm, generally the faster it reads/writes.
Personally, I'd be going with a SSD.
Hey guys,
I am eyeing out a laptop I want to buy, very nice specs and so on, but comes with a 1 TB hard drive.
They have a spec-option though and they'll do:
- 1 TB hard drive @ 7200 rpm
- 2 TB hard drive @ 5400 rpm
That leads me to my question. Which one?
What does it mean, performance wise, which speed you choose? Will one actually see it in performance, data writing speed (like when transferring files), where exactly does one see or feel the difference between 5400 and 7200 rpm?
Never actually given this thought before to be honest.
True freedom is the greatest gift a man can possess, yet is the one thing most easily and innocently given away, to crafty curses and binds cleverly disguised as blessings and gifts, in the pursuit of supposed achievement, status and power.
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I'm a little surprised that 5400 rpm is around.
The faster the rpm, generally the faster it reads/writes.
Personally, I'd be going with a SSD.
Yeah, SSD would be nice, but OK, this is basically when you buy the machine they fit an HDD.
Thanks, yeah, so 7200 rpm it is then.
But OK, like where do you "see" the effect though? Is it like when you're saving a Word doc and it takes a few seconds when you hit the save button, or like when you're opening explorer and you get that "working on it..." message?
Last edited by irritant; 23-02-17 at 08:27 PM.
True freedom is the greatest gift a man can possess, yet is the one thing most easily and innocently given away, to crafty curses and binds cleverly disguised as blessings and gifts, in the pursuit of supposed achievement, status and power.
You should see bugger all difference between a 7200 and 5400 rpm drive while saving a word document or opening windows explorer.
I would make the choice between the two depending on which is more important to you, speed or battery life, the 7200rpm HDD should be a little faster, but the 5400rpm HDD should use less power.
In my experience, 7200 rpm is noticibly faster and snappier in real World use - particularly for things that generate a lot of seek activity - like booting Windows. Saving a single large file - probably not much faster for that.
The main advantage is in lower latency - if the disk spins faster, then on average, the disk controller has less time to wait for the sector it wants to read to spin around under the head after seeking to a new track. In enterprise environments, 10k RPM and 15k rpm drives are common, but big power consumption and $$$.
If speed is at all important, get an SSD.
[edit: and good hard drives are so cheap these days, that if you don't like the disk supplied with the machine, just turf it and put the disk you want in. Hint: SSD gives a massive boost in performance]
Last edited by shred; 24-02-17 at 06:18 AM.
I totally agree with shred's above statement but swapping HDD's in some laptops can be a challenge......some are as simple as a couple of screws and a nice access panel to having to gut the machine to get to it. Google how easy it is for your laptop before you consider this step.
I concur with this completely. I have three laptops in the house and I made sure all had easy access to the HD, Wifi card and RAM. They are all ASUS machines and I have put SSDs in the two that didn't have one. The performance increase is phenomenal. Just hang a HD like a Passport off the side if you want space.
You can also get drive caddies that slide into the optical slot instead of the bluray/dvd drive. These will accept a HD or SSD. Then on the odd occasion you may need an optical drive you can use an external one. There are certain advantages to this especially with bluray laptop drives.
Of course, if its a new machine, then you will almost certainly void the warranty so take that into account.
The fact that there's a highway to hell and a stairway to heaven says a lot about the anticipated traffic flow.
irritant (24-02-17)
Go for the 7200 ,
[ i presume it's Sata , not Pata ] , - as it will have , more CACHE , which is a big plus ,,
even ask what cache it is eg , 16 , 32 , 64 MB ,
the speed , is noticeable with access times ,, depending on the CPU , Ram etc ..
SSD is the way ta go , but if your like me , i cannot afford one with the amount a space i want ..
i can buy a Sata 7200 1Tb 3.5' , fer 70au$$ , ssd is outta my range - pension an' all ...
I carve up me drives to at least 4 Partitions , for movies , data . music , Backups etc ..
hope this helps ..
... edit , OR - as Enf says ,,[ was posted whilst i was thinking ....]
Last edited by manfromironbark; 24-02-17 at 08:50 AM.
irritant (24-02-17)
If you do go with switching out the hdd I have one of these hdd in my laptop .Its a hybrid ssd/hdd not as good as dedicated ssd but better than a standard 7200 hdd for read write and boot times . (affordable as well )
Last edited by carjackma; 24-02-17 at 10:41 AM.
irritant (24-02-17)
Ask your self what you need it for ?
For me the 2TB option would be the way to go because my demands on a laptop is having a huge amount of data available 'on the go' where I don't have (or want to pay for expensive) Internet. I do stuff like downloading the entire Wikipedia, every music video I like on utube, huge ebook/emag and electronic data collections, etc. I like to be independant.
I want this all in one piece with me and not an anoying external HD dangling around.
For me superfast SSD makes no sense in a laptop, I have something else for gaming and video encoding.
Boot time irrelavant, all my lappies just go to sleep and are instantly on when needed.
Everybody is different
Last edited by Uncle Fester; 24-02-17 at 11:02 AM.
Update: A deletion of features that work well and ain't broke but are deemed outdated in order to add things that are up to date and broken.
Compatibility: A word soon to be deleted from our dictionaries as it is outdated.
Humans: Entities that are not only outdated but broken... AI-self-learning-update-error...terminate...terminate...
irritant (24-02-17)
if the 2tb is worth what i just looked up, $145
id flog it off, buy a 250 ssd for $120 & a 500gb usb for say $60 or as above try a sshd
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irritant (24-02-17)
irritant (24-02-17)
Thanks guys. Yeah, when I really think about it, 2 TB I reckon will fill up pretty quick nowadays (I like HD 1080p videos , and 4K in the future) so I think SSD is the way to go, and then get an external HDD. I saw a nice one of 8 TB yesterday.
I am going to find out if I can spec it up with an SSD from the manufacturer, instead of an HDD. Yeah it's also an ASUS machine.
It's the G752, and they'll do you up to 64 GB DDR-4 RAM, which is nice (it has four slots inside, for 16 GB modules). It's probably silly, but I can never have enough RAM.
Last edited by irritant; 24-02-17 at 06:13 PM.
True freedom is the greatest gift a man can possess, yet is the one thing most easily and innocently given away, to crafty curses and binds cleverly disguised as blessings and gifts, in the pursuit of supposed achievement, status and power.
irritant (24-02-17)
If the laptop supports mSATA, you may be able to have your cake and eat it too. The mSATA SSD drives just look like a big RAM module. Here's a (randomly chosen) example:
If you do start looking at SSDs, don't get too hung up on comparing the speeds of them - they're all blisteringly fast compared to a rust drive.
irritant (24-02-17)
True freedom is the greatest gift a man can possess, yet is the one thing most easily and innocently given away, to crafty curses and binds cleverly disguised as blessings and gifts, in the pursuit of supposed achievement, status and power.
What do you guys think of the lappy itself as a whole? Pretty good?
Would like to output the display to a 28-inch 4K monitor too.
Last edited by irritant; 24-02-17 at 09:01 PM.
True freedom is the greatest gift a man can possess, yet is the one thing most easily and innocently given away, to crafty curses and binds cleverly disguised as blessings and gifts, in the pursuit of supposed achievement, status and power.
All my machines are ASUS machines...two are ROG machines. I would get the biggest HDD available as the laptop itself will be uber fast with the SSD. I would not void the warranty either, although I have never had an issue with one. Access to the HDD, SSD and RAM is easy as there is a removable flap underneath that exposes those parts. There are also online guides from the ROG community for upgrading if you want to use them....
I would assume that the graphics card would do 4K...so you will need a port to run the monitor. But it should not be a problem...
I dont think HDMI will do 60hz....
The fact that there's a highway to hell and a stairway to heaven says a lot about the anticipated traffic flow.
irritant (25-02-17)
True freedom is the greatest gift a man can possess, yet is the one thing most easily and innocently given away, to crafty curses and binds cleverly disguised as blessings and gifts, in the pursuit of supposed achievement, status and power.
no offence intended Adrian , just constructive mate ,
yep in 1st post , would be good ta know tha rig + specs ,
than all could take an informed opinion .
me and my statement about Pata -Sata , i feel like a Dinosaur..... [ bit me tongue ] .
i have also looked it up , comes with small Boot SSD and Sata secondary ..
I agree with Tech on this ,,
Geez , all my beloved stuff , is OOOLD.... , but works fer me .
I have 2 Toshiba lappys , Intel 3.02 's on me office shelf . i fire them up now and again [XP] . 17yrs old ....
but all in all Adrian , great bloody rig man , you will have fun with it ..
again , not being offensive ...
Cheers ..
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