• Jarix@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Are they any louder than any HDD from the last 30 years?

    If so, im actually curious why that is

    Edit: fixed to say HDD not SSD

    • Ugurcan@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Oops, yes. I definitely would expect these to be much louder than your 6 GB 1998 model HDD wrangling under stress of copying files at 30 MB/s.

      • MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        Your everyday modern HDD does not much more than 60MB/s after the on-disk cache (a few GB) is full.

        • DaPorkchop_@lemmy.ml
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          4 months ago

          not sure what you’re on about, i have some cheap 500GB USB 3 drives from like 2016 lying around and even those can happily deal with sustained writes over 130MB/s.

          • frezik@midwest.social
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            4 months ago

            When the cache isn’t full, yes, that’s true. Copy a file that’s significantly bigger than cache and performance will drop part way through.

            • DaPorkchop_@lemmy.ml
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              4 months ago

              You’ve made me uncertain if I’ve somehow never noticed this before, so I gave it a shot. I’ve been dd-ing /dev/random onto one of those drives for the last 20 minutes and the transfer rate has only dropped by about 4MB/s since I started, which is about the kind of slowdown I would expect as the drive head gets closer to the center of the platter.

              EDIT: I’ve now been doing 1.2GB/s onto an 8 drive RAID0 (8x 600GB 15k SAS Seagates) for over 10 minutes with no noticable slowdown. That comes out to 150MB/s per drive, and these drives are from 2014 or 2015. If you’re only getting 60MB/s on a modern non-SMR HDD, especially something as dense as an 18TB drive, you’ve either configured something wrong or your hardware is broken.