On Monday 31 October 2005 15:20, Robert Denier wrote: > I didn't see this mentioned so I thought I'd add it. Hard drives come > with different amounts of cache ram. I believe 16MB is about the > largest out now. > > The point being that a larger cache may result in a bit less work for > the moving components which in turn may result in longer life. I'm not > sure this would matter in practice though. Still, if your getting a new > drive, I'd look for at least an 8MB cache for performance reasons if > nothing else..
in fact all the extra cache does is allow the drive to appear to operate faster. hdparm has a -t and -T tests, one for cache speeds one for actual disk speeds. Since the amount of data being written stays the same there is no real difference in component wear. The platters will be spinning no matter what and the head movement is done electromechanically, so theres no real wear and tear to be concerned about. > Another thing worth considering, particularly if you use many of the > same drives is how much power they use. High power usage will make them > harder to keep cool and cost some more electric wise.. this is a good point, as it affects power supply requirements (always calculate based on the max current rating). I've found power consumption has gone down overall for harddrives, leveling out fairly recently. Plus the amount of heat difference is minor between drives and in a properly cooling case will result in perhaps a degree temperature difference. Steve _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list mythtv-users@mythtv.org http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users