Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB

Written by Harry Butler

March 6, 2009 | 09:04

Tags: #10000rpm #clever-girl #comparison #fast #hard-disk #hard-drive #open-doors #raptor #raptor-attack #speed #ssd

Companies: #wd #western-digital

HDTach results

Website: HD Tach 3.0

HD Tach

Burst Speed

  • Intel X25-M 80GB SSD
  • Intel X25-E 32GB SSD
  • Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB
  • Seagate 1.5TB Barracuda 7200.11
  • Samsung SpinPoint F1 1TB
  • OCZ Apex 120GB SSD
  • Seagate 250GB 7200.10
  • G.Skill Titan 256GB SSD
  • G.Skill 128GB SSD
  • Patriot Warp V.2 128GB SSD
  • Western Digital 150GB 10,000RPM Raptor
  • Seagate 1TB 7200.11
    • 259.9
    • 259.3
    • 249.9
    • 248.8
    • 234.6
    • 234.0
    • 232.8
    • 224.0
    • 176.0
    • 175.0
    • 134.0
    • 131.0
0
50
100
150
200
250
MB/s (higher is better)
  • Speed (MB/s)

The 16MB of on-board cache delivers very impressive burst speeds, beating out all but the ultra-premium Intel X25 based drives and comfortably ahead of the the chasing pack of 1TB/1.5TB drives and various SSDs.

HD Tach

Average Read

  • Intel X25-M 80GB SSD
  • Intel X25-E 32GB SSD
  • OCZ Apex 120GB SSD
  • G.Skill Titan 256GB SSD
  • G.Skill 128GB SSD
  • Patriot Warp V.2 128GB SSD
  • Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB
  • Seagate 1.5TB Barracuda 7200.11
  • Samsung SpinPoint F1 1TB
  • Seagate 1TB 7200.11
  • Seagate 250GB 7200.10
  • Western Digital 150GB 10,000RPM Raptor
    • 237.1
    • 230.0
    • 165.5
    • 161.5
    • 142.5
    • 140.0
    • 108.5
    • 106.5
    • 92.8
    • 91.1
    • 89.6
    • 82.1
0
50
100
150
200
250
MB/s (higher is better)
  • Speed (MB/s

Average read speeds are the fastest we've ever seen from a mechanical hard drive, although are a long way behind those of the better SSDs, especially the dual drive controller based OCZ Apex and G.Skill TItan and Intel X25 drives. While this is undoubtedly still an impressive result for a mechanical drive, it's clear that SSDs are going to hold a sizeable advantage in the read speed stakes.

HD Tach

Average Write

  • OCZ Apex 120GB SSD
  • G.Skill Titan 256GB SSD
  • G.Skill 128GB SSD
  • Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB
  • Samsung SpinPoint F1 1TB
  • Intel X25-M 80GB SSD
  • Seagate 1TB 7200.11
  • Seagate 250GB 7200.10
  • Western Digital 150GB 10,000RPM Raptor
    • 137.3
    • 134.5
    • 87.7
    • 81.4
    • 81.2
    • 78.1
    • 62.2
    • 61.2
    • 51.3
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
MB/s (higher is better)
  • Speed (MB/s

Average write speeds, while impressive for a mechanical drive are barely faster than Samsung's F1 1TB, a drive that costs less than half as much as the VelociRaptor and packs over three times the storage. The massive write speeds achieved by the dual drive controller equipped OCZ and G.Skill SSDs really don't have a lot to worry about here - they're a great deal faster, in these theoretical tests at least.

HD Tach

Random Access Time

  • Intel X25-M 80GB SSD
  • Intel X25-E 32GB SSD
  • Patriot Warp V.2 128GB SSD
  • OCZ Apex 120GB SSD
  • G.Skill Titan 256GB SSD
  • G.Skill 128GB SSD
  • Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB
  • Western Digital 150GB 10,000RPM Raptor
  • Seagate 1TB 7200.11
  • Samsung Spinpoint F1 1TB
  • Seagate 1.5TB Barracuda 7200.11
  • Seagate 250GB 7200.10
    • 0.1
    • 0.1
    • 0.2
    • 0.2
    • 0.2
    • 0.2
    • 7.0
    • 7.8
    • 12.5
    • 13.5
    • 15.0
    • 15.1
0
3
5.5
8
10.5
13
15.5
m/s - less is better
  • Time (milliseconds)

The VelociRaptor's claims of improved access times are well founded, with random access times of just 7.0ms. While the difference between the Raptor and chasing pack of 1TB drives doesn't seem like much, that 5ms difference becomes more apparent when the drive is working hard with large amounts of small files in circumstances like system boot and game load times. However, the SSDs are understandably far ahead with access times of less than 0.2ms thanks to their solid state design.
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