[Edit]Im basically going to using it for games like Sc2 and FPS, but a mmorpg here and there. Would games like Dragon age and games like this make a difference?
HardDrive, does it matter?
Blogs > instantcold |
instantcold
United States38 Posts
[Edit]Im basically going to using it for games like Sc2 and FPS, but a mmorpg here and there. Would games like Dragon age and games like this make a difference? | ||
ieatkids5
United States4628 Posts
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intrudor
Canada446 Posts
just sayin.. | ||
sluggaslamoo
Australia4494 Posts
7200RPM will use up more battery power not only because of the drive, but also because your laptop will be running a bit hotter, not sure how much though. Unless you get a good brand it may be more unreliable. The other thing is the price, a Seagate 7200rpm 2.5in HD was 3x more expensive when I bought it. For gaming the only difference it will make is load times, its not going to make a difference to the actual performance of the game. The other thing is that you want higher RPM usually to help random IO rather than sequential IO. So in the case of a laptop because you only have one HD, its probably going to get a lot more fragmented than when you have a disk heirarchy. So you cache heaps of stuff and multitask a lot and it causes the computer to lag heaps then you might consider getting the 7200rpm. If you want fast sequential IO for loading games and stuff you might want to consider getting an SSD instead (most are terrible for multi-tasking though). Overall 5400rpm isn't much of an issue and you probably won't notice the difference if you are used to general laptop speeds. | ||
DeathByMonkeys
United States742 Posts
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blabber
United States4448 Posts
There's a difference when moving a bunch of files from say my mp3 player or something, but I partially blame the fact that my laptop is running Vista | ||
apm66
Canada943 Posts
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instantcold
United States38 Posts
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xmShake
United States1100 Posts
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pinenamu
United States770 Posts
edit: oh nvm, I have a 7200 RPM since a TLer recommended it to me haha. However, I don't see any differences between my laptop with a 5400 and the desktop with a 7200 with everyday stuff like someone said above.. | ||
ShadowDrgn
United States2497 Posts
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vlaric
United States412 Posts
If you wanted a real improvement, though, you should look into Solid State Drives (SSDs); these drives outperform traditional HDDs by miles, however they're very expensive for their capacity compared to HDDs. | ||
semantics
10040 Posts
7200 ones tend to use more power and get a bit hotter though but i mean it's like nothing kind of heat. | ||
RumZ
United States956 Posts
A harddrives' RPM doesn't matter too much these days between those two numbers. A lot of the data doesn't need to send that fast, and even when it does, it won't choke your computer out, except in some high end cases. If you could somehow copy/paste or write down the rest of the computer specs, I could quickly evaluate it and tell you if the computer's performance will be choked by your hard disk drive. Also, as typed out previously by Vlaric, SSD's are good and extremely effecient, but chances are you if you are unsure about the price difference between the two RPM's in those HDDs, than SSD is not an option for you currently. | ||
FragKrag
United States11538 Posts
Assuming there is a price difference, I would get the cheaper of the two. If there isn't a price difference, I would go with the 7200rpm. | ||
jimminy_kriket
Canada5475 Posts
This might help you a little http://www.tomshardware.com/charts/2009-2.5-mobile-hard-drive-charts/benchmarks,53.html | ||
tarpman
Canada717 Posts
edit: In case it isn't clear, the hard drive will make no difference at all once your game is loaded; it only affects how long the loading phase takes. | ||
sluggaslamoo
Australia4494 Posts
On June 19 2010 13:44 instantcold wrote: Thanks everyone, I was just asking because I am tight on money and i am going to be using it for gaming. So i want to minimize costs as much as i can. Then get a 5400RPM drive and try and get the biggest cache possible with the drive, the 7200rpm will be a waste of money. | ||
Jibba
United States22883 Posts
For instance, a 5400rpm 640GB drive is pretty comparable in performance to a 7200rpm 500GB drive, because the data density is higher. | ||
haduken
Australia8267 Posts
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