Forums | Chat | News | Contact Us | Register | PSU Social |
PSU: *in AMS* I believe i can fly!
Forums | Chat | News | Contact Us | Register | PSU Social |
Home | Forum | Chat | Wiki | Social | AGN | PS2 Stats |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
2004-04-18, 10:03 PM | [Ignore Me] #1 | ||
Contributor Major General
|
I want to buy an External Firewire HardDrive so I can record in fraps without any loss but I think firewire is faster than an internal harddrive does anyone happen to have any numbers and stats?
|
||
|
2004-04-21, 12:15 PM | [Ignore Me] #8 | ||
Major
|
SCSI or Small Computer Serial Interface - was used in servers for a long time because of the a few reasons - once was the number of drives that could be handled (up to 7 per chain) - often capacity and RPM was higher than IDE drives as well - however, in recent years, IDE has caught up to SCSI in regard to capacity, transfer rate and RPM so the difference is much less. The biggest reason SCSI was used for servers however was not any of the reasons mentioned so far, but it's ability to stack access commands. SCSI interface can buffer disk requests from multiple users on a server and prioritize the requests based upon their position on the drive for more efficent access making them ideal for server based applications. With a single user PC - this advantage is unnecessary and with the higher costs involved with SCSI and the need for a seperate interface, SCSI was not the choice for user PC's
Firewire or IEEE 1394 (originally at 400 M/s) is much faster than USB 1 (1 M/s) and USB 2 (480 M/s) may beat it, but an 800 M/s version of firewire is now available. SCSI's Ultra320 is now the fastest interface for that side, but SATA actually performs better even at 150 M/s. Considering the internal IDE max out at 133 M/s, firewire externals may appear to give good competition against internal HD's. This is not the case however. In looking over some benchmarks from Tom's Hardware it would appear that the max transfer rate is a dismal 40 M/s or less. Despite the high interface transfer rate, performance of external drives just don't hold up compared to internal systems which achieve up to 150 M/s (see this article at Tom's ) So stick with a nice fast internal HD with SATA if possible for the fastest performance. If you really want speed, go with a raid array, but external's are not a good choice for this application. |
||
|
2004-04-21, 04:02 PM | [Ignore Me] #10 | |||
Major
|
|
|||
|
2004-04-21, 04:14 PM | [Ignore Me] #11 | ||
The Raptor Driver WD make beat alot of Scsi in alot of beanches especialy the ones that matter for PC users/gamers
__________________
All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others. |
|||
|
2004-04-21, 09:20 PM | [Ignore Me] #12 | ||
Actually I've been thinkin about gettin 2 Raptors and RAIDing them but it would be so much $$ and I'm saving up for my contribution to the "S4V3 T3H P5U" fund
I might just go and get another Seagate 7200 RPM 80 gig SATA, but I'd have to wipe all my current data on this drive (20 gigs or so), which I dunno if i wanna do... edit- oh and Mars, I found the article very informative, and quite surprising. I figured SCSI with its 320 meg burst mode would pwn a SATA with only 150. I stand corrected. Last edited by Electrofreak; 2004-04-21 at 09:24 PM. |
|||
|
|
Bookmarks |
|
|