I have run a system with 2 SAS 15k drives in RAID 0 and it sounded like 2 cats killing each other under heavy I/O loads, not a good thing for home use. And the access times are indeed around 3-5ms.
I have run a system with 2 SAS 15k drives in RAID 0 and it sounded like 2 cats killing each other under heavy I/O loads, not a good thing for home use. And the access times are indeed around 3-5ms.
Why? Spinning a spindle at 15k means some serious centrifugal force, so the spindle better be of small in diameter (as is the case for Raptors). And small is lacking in storage space.
600GB 15k SAS is current "top", AFAIK. You can connect those 3TB SATA backup volumes to a SAS controller too.![]()
Oh goodness that again. Just construct newton's laws in a rotating system and see what happensi just want to mention supposedly centrifugal force is a myth and misnomer, they beat this down in physics classes, it's supposed to be centripetal force
Oh goodness that again. Just construct newton's laws in a rotating system and see what happens![]()
But somehow that's one of the few things that everyone takes away from physics classes - I even remember xkcd doing a comic about that a long time ago.
I agree with Zap though, there's a place for a 600GB 10KRPM VelociRaptor @ $130, it would be a pretty perfect size for apps and games that don't fit on a SSD, but time for that is running out as the next gen of SSD should halve the cost per GB and bring performance improvements making it even harder to justify investing anything into disc based drives for performance needs
*catches link before its blown away* Yeah exactly, perfect. Good find (the alt text is pure genius once again)What? I didn't catch all of that? What did you say? Were you talking about this XKCD? It was either that or something about how bad your STDs are. Will someone shut off that loud ass 15K raptor please!
With falling SSD prices and SATA 6Gps, I see no point in 15k drives any longer. Yes they were great for servers for the past decade, but HDDs life is at an end in terms of performance.
Sorry, I do know that, but didn't know the "proper english" term. So: the structural integrity of a larger platter could not sustain the centripetal force required for 15k operation?i just want to mention supposedly centrifugal force is a myth and misnomer, they beat this down in physics classes, it's supposed to be centripetal force
complete waste for just "storage" if anything I specifically search for slower spinning drives for my "storage" needs
I agree with Zap though, there's a place for a 600GB 10KRPM VelociRaptor @ $130, it would be a pretty perfect size for apps and games that don't fit on a SSD, but time for that is running out as the next gen of SSD should halve the cost per GB and bring performance improvements making it even harder to justify investing anything into disc based drives for performance needs
Oh goodness that again. Just construct newton's laws in a rotating system and see what happens![]()
But somehow that's one of the few things that everyone takes away from physics classes - I even remember xkcd doing a comic about that a long time ago.
So if we give up on the premisse, it doesn't work any longer? Who would've thought that. In reference to a rotating frame you can show a centrifugal force, not more not less - I'm always open if you want to refute that, a little bit mechanics once and again is quite fun (ah though I would prefer not having to check the math in my spare time).yeah until if the system breaks..and the shards fly in your face... too bad the pieces don't just keep spinning by themselves..
Noise? Heat? I know SSD's are the better choice but i'd really love a 1TB 15K Velociraptor for storage.![]()
So if we give up on the premisse, it doesn't work any longer? Who would've thought that. In reference to a rotating frame you can show a centrifugal force, not more not less - I'm always open if you want to refute that, a little bit mechanics once and again is quite fun (ah though I would prefer not having to check the math in my spare time).
	So I can just assume that you've got no idea what you're talking about and go on, since I don't get any mechanical or mathematical proofs? Or is your whole point not to object the existance of a centrifugal force? I mean my classical mechanics courses are some time away, but I'm good enough in math, so don't hold back.it works until it doesn't;
@taltamir: What I'm interested in is seeing how the advance of SSDs will influence SAS drives. I'd think we should see slower drives with larger density since fast spinning drives are only really useful to get random access down, which is just obsolete with SSDs.
SSDs for low latency and optimize bandwidth for the HDDs - similar to what we do on the desktop.
