IDE hard drives just got a lot faster.It totally amazes me every time I take a long, detailed look at hard drive technology.
Through the years I have observed the evolution of hard drives...
* Drive technologies has evolved from... MFM to SCSI to IDE.
* Size has increased from... 5 MB (yes MEGA not GIGA) to over 250 GB in size.
* Average access time has decreased from... 210 milliseconds to less then 9 milliseconds.
* Capacity per surface has increased form... 500 KB (that's Kilo, not Mega or Giga) per surface to 50 GB per surface.
* Disk speed has increased from... 1800 RPM to 10,000 RPM.
* DMA (data burst speed) has increased from... 8, to 16, to 33, to 66, to 100 & now (133 Maxtor only).
* Cost has shrunk from... $1000.00 per MB to less then $1.00 per GB.
* Width has shrunk from... 5 1/4 to 3 1/2 & now to 2 1/2 inch (if Seagate has their way).
* Height has shrunk from... 3 1/4 to 1 inch.
* The number of platters (or disks) has shrunk from... 10 platters to only 1 - 4 platters.
* Reliability has increased, noise & heat has decreased... a great combination for sure.
* Formatting a drive has gone from DOS's infamous FDisk to being built into most newer operating systems & is now so easy to do or change.
* On-board cache memory has gone from... None, to a few KB, to 1 Mb, to 2 MB, & now 8 MB.
Moore's LAW doesn't hold a candle to hard drive technology. Just consider this...
My first Intel PC (1983) had a processor speed of 5 Mega Hz. The first hard drives for that computer had a capacity of 5 Mega Byte. Just remember the number 5.
Today's processors top out at 3.4 Gig. Hard drives now top out at 250 Gig. Hard drives have improved 73.5 times in capacity more then processors...
WOW!! The very first hard drive that was available for my computer back in 1983 was a whopping 5 MB & it cost $5000.000... that's 1000 bucks per MB. It was a large, heavy, 5 1/4 inch full height (3 1/4 inch high) monster with 8 platters. It was slow, very noisy, ran hot & was unreliable. No wonder I stuck with four floppy drives in my TI Pro 8088 computer for several years.
You can now install anywhere form 4 - 6 of today's drives in the same space as it took for one drive in 1983.
In the space that then would hold 5 MB of drive capacity you can now put 1 - 1.5 TB (that's Terabytes) of capacity. A Terabyte is 1000 GB.
As I recall, it was not until 1990 that I finally broke down & bought my first "huge" hard drive... a 20 MB MiniScribe that ran at 4200 RPM & had something like 19 milliseconds access time. It cost me over $400 (OEM price) & I was in hog heaven with this "speed demon".
Now, lets advance the time frame to 2003 & what do we have?
Glad you asked.
A couple of weeks ago I bought two new Maxtor DiamonMax Plus 9 model 6Y120PO 7200 RPM IDE drives with 8 MB of on-board cache; that is 4 times the normal 2 MB cache that most drives come with.
Boy, are they fast, fast, fast.
I also have two Maxtor 80 GB 7200 IDE drives with the standard 2 MB of cache that I got about a year ago.
The new 120 Gig drives test out at over TWICE the throughput of the 80 Gig drives. An example is a test using Fresh Devices Fresh Diagnose hard drive performance test...
Write speeds... 80 GB drive 15.2 MB per Sec.
Write speeds... 120 GB drive 33.5 MB per Sec.
Read speeds... 80 GB drive 12.6 MB per sec.
Read speeds... 120 GB drive 32.4 MB per sec.
The faster speeds are for real as all my programs now snap to & seem to jump from the hard drive. This is a very real improvement for sure.
The last time I had such a noticeable improvement was back in 1989 when I changed my motherboard form a 5 MHz 8088 to a 12 MHz 286. That let me change the hard drive interleaving from 6 to 1 to 1 to 1 interleave. All drives today run at 1 to 1 interleaving. That simply means that for every turn of the drive one track of data is loaded into memory. Back in the early days the CPU & memory was so slow that hard drives had to be slowed down so they came up with the 6 to 1 interleaving that caused the drive to rotate 6 times for one track of data to be pulled into memory.
Man... have we advanced or what