The Contenders & The Test

To make these graphs legible I've left out the SSDs, but note that these are the same benchmarks we use for our SSD reviews. If you want to compare, head on over to our SSD Bench database.

I've included the latest 6Gbps drives from Western Digital and Seagate, the Caviar Black and the Barracuda XT. Both are TB-class drives that are the fastest 7200 RPM offerings you can buy for a desktop today.

I've also included the previous generation 300GB VelociRaptor and the old 150GB Raptor to give you an idea of how far things have come if you're still holding on to one of those old drives.

For you notebook users I ran tests on a Seagate Momentus 5400.6 drive. It's not fast compared to a desktop drive but it gives you an idea of the performance difference that exists between 2.5" and 3.5" drives.

Finally I included an older Seagate Barracuda ES to give you a reference point if you have a 7200 RPM drive that's a few years old.

CPU Intel Core i7 965 running at 3.2GHz (Turbo & EIST Disabled)
Motherboard: Intel DX58SO (Intel X58)
Chipset: Intel X58 + Marvell SATA 6Gbps PCIe
Chipset Drivers: Intel 9.1.1.1015 + Intel IMSM 8.9
Memory: Qimonda DDR3-1333 4 x 1GB (7-7-7-20)
Video Card: eVGA GeForce GTX 285
Video Drivers: NVIDIA ForceWare 190.38 64-bit
Desktop Resolution: 1920 x 1200
OS: Windows 7 x64
Meet the VR200M Sequential Read/Write Speed
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  • pjconoso - Thursday, April 8, 2010 - link

    Maxtor's with Seagate, so there.
  • ClagMaster - Tuesday, April 6, 2010 - link

    These are good drives carrying on the Raptor tradition, but at the asking price at ~$0.60/Gb, way too pricy.

    I am going to wait next year for third generation SSD's at $0.50/Gb and 2-4x the current bandwidth before switching over.
  • leonsk - Tuesday, April 6, 2010 - link

    Agree with Anand that SSD bor boot drive and 2 large HDs in RAID-1 is the most effective rig. What controller do you use? Or are you with software RAID?
  • AstroGuardian - Wednesday, April 7, 2010 - link

    Of course not mate. Software RAID is dead. I am sure he is using ICH10R's RAID controller.... Right Anand?
  • bobbyto34 - Wednesday, April 7, 2010 - link

    Hello,
    I have to change my primary hard drive (Samsung Spinpoint F1) because of some read failures...
    I'm hesitating between a good ol' 1TB 7200 drive, an x-25M 160Gb or a new Velociraptor.

    The computer will be used as music station with Sonar and sound banks. The current problem is that it's quite slow when loading those enormous sound banks with a 7200 drive.

    I would like good performance in loading these sound banks, with silence because it's dedicated to music (and some gaming :p), and with reasonable disk space... For the moment, I can't see a good compromise with those 3 parameters. Am I wrong ?
  • slickr - Wednesday, April 7, 2010 - link

    What the heck were you talking there buddy?
    You just buy 2 1TB HD and an SDD drive, to be faster. Do you know how much such configuration would put you back?

    If not, go for the new raptor. Oh really, you just found out hot water. How about you mention its twice as cheap and even more to go for it, ten times more reliable than SSD's, and you can actually store 600gb, instead of 80gb of the intel ssd's or whatever for 250 dollars.
  • Compddd - Wednesday, April 7, 2010 - link

    When will these start shipping?
  • GullLars - Wednesday, April 7, 2010 - link

    Another great test from Anand.
    I have a comment though, and i see i'm a day late, so i may be ignored here :(

    The IOmeter sequential tests, while spanning the entire drive, only run for 3 minutes, and therefore only uses a small % of the drive area, so the speeds you see are near max.
    For the 600GB velociraptor, you have 140MB/s for 3 minutes = 25GB. By looking at the HDtach curve, the drop-off has barely started by that point.

    I also have something i want to get out there. Off-topic to this test, but relevant for high-performance HDDs.
    Why hasn't any HDD maker yet added a flash read-cache?
    By adding a single 4-8GB MLC NAND chip, costing roughly $2-3/GB = $8-24 added cost, and using it for read-caching hot-files, you can get around 4-5000 4KB random read IOPS = 16-20MB/s (@QD 1) and roughly 40-60MB/s sequential read for the cached data.
    Tracking hot-files should be easy to implement simply by logging read-access to LBAs, and with a slight bit more effort, filtering LBAs being read in a small block random pattern. Possibly also caching file-table and folder/file structure and metadata, as well as the data typically read the first seconds after power-up or spin-up.
    Using this type of caching would have a noticable effect on typical usage patterns, and especially multi-tasking, but would likely not make an impact on benchmarking since it would take time for new data to reach cache.

    Larger hot-files could benefit from the cache as they could be read from both flash and disk at the same time with the speed of both combined (80-140 + 40-60).

    Any thoughts about using flash read-cache people?
  • ETR - Wednesday, April 7, 2010 - link

    Thats all i want to know,

    Does this drive have it or not???

    not one reviewer anywhere has that info... nor did WD's website.

    gezzzz how can anandtech skip that info................?
  • BoFox - Thursday, April 8, 2010 - link

    Dear Anand,

    I'm looking to upgrade to 15000rpm SAS drives since my Foxconn Bloodrage motherboard has 2 SAS ports (it's an X58 motherboard and there are couple other from Asus and Gigabyte that include SAS ports, IIRC..).

    How would this 600GB Velociraptor fare against a Seagate 15k.7 600GB Cheetah in terms of speed/performance?

    Sure, a 15k drive might be a bit more noisy and power-hungry, but I'm ok with this since I have other noisy stuff (including a noisy blu-ray player). I'm thinking that having a couple 15000rpm 600GB SAS drives is still a better investment than those tiny SSD's. Over at techreport.com, it's shown that SSD's (including Intel's) have some serious performance issues with certain real-world applications and that they "degenerate" in performance whether TRIM is being used or not. Stability is another question, right?

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