| Bottom | |
|---|---|
| Author |
Thread : I have an Idea for faster HD's
|
|
More Information
|
Ok, please disregard if this has been covered or is just a plain stupid idea.
|
|
Related Pr oduct
|
Register or
log in to remove.
|
|
More Information
|
The problem is that config would need to readers (one for each platter), and that would skyrocket the price of the disc, wich is bad |
|
Do not eat the styrofoam
More Information
|
Maybe a SATA limitation? A RAID setup will have one SATA cable for each disk, while what you're thinking of would only have one cable. No idea if that matters - Let me see, 3 Gbps/s is about 375 MB/s and that's several times what a good disk needs.
|
|
More Information
|
Good point, but the read/write heads should not need to change as they would all move in unison as they already do. As far as the extra raid logic, things would come down in price if they would make it standard for all drives.
|
|
More Information
|
Message edited by thematrixh azuneo on 10-23-2007 at 04:33:17 PM |
|
More Information
|
I'm pretty sure this is already done because the armature is a single unit and the arms do not move independently between platters and I read somewhere that they did write the drivers on multiple platter drives to read/write on multiple platters simultaneously.
|
|
More Information
|
What I was after was just one armature and two heads reading at the same time on two different platters.
Message edited by thematrixh azuneo on 10-23-2007 at 04:50:31 PM |
|
There is ALWAYS a drone.
More Information
|
Interesting idea. I think though, that we're going to see bigger and bigger single drives for capacity, and faster and faster SSDrives for speed. We'll see. When SSD is down to maybe $1.50-$2.00 per GB, I'll probably buy at least one. --------------- There is ALWAYS a drone. Exactly where, or how many drones you will encounter may vary, but that there will be at least one will not. |
|
More Information
|
I believe the limitation for read/write to different heads simultaneously lies in the controller and circuitry architecture.
Message edited by SomeJoe777 7 on 10-23-2007 at 08:22:33 PM --------------- - SomeJoe7777 "Did he dazzle you with his extensive knowledge of mineral water? Or was it his in-depth analysis of, uh, uh, Marky Mark that finally reeled you in?" - Troy Dyer (Ethan Hawke), Reality Bites, 1994 |
|
More Information
|
I'm sure it could be done that way. Would it be worthwhile for the extra cost? Not too likely. Current OS's such as Linux (can't be sure of Windows) retain as much information in their memory cache as they can. If you have 4 gigs, probably around 3 gigs of the last reads would be cached. With the current cost of ram and that kind of caching, disk read speed becomes almost irrelevant for most applications. For example I can start a compile on a 2 core CPU with 2 gigs of RAM running 4 threads. The compile will peg both cores, and disk IO is very light. An old 30 gig keeps up just fine.
|
|
More Information
|
Well if you had two armature assemblies, you could theoretically hook two SATA ports up on the same HD. In that way, it would still be a RAID 0 setup and should be cheaper than two physically separate drives. Furthermore, you wouldn't be using any more armatures, you would just need a separate servo and control system for it. It would be an interesting solution and should be cheaper than two drives. If you had a space-conscious setup, it would be the way to go (until SSDs anyway). |
|
More Information
|
|
|
More Information
|
|
MyDiscussions.Net Forum, Version 2007.1
© 2000-2006 No1Dev

