C
conkersack
Hello all,
I've hunted around for a clear answer to my questions, but to no avail,
so I'm going to ask here. I hope this is the right place. I will also
be opening myself up to enormous amounts of ridicule, but I can handle
that. Here goes:
Does the performance of a hard drive decrease as it becomes fuller? I
have a SATA 35 GB 10,000rpm Western Digital HD as a boot drive (NTFS)
and an external USB 2.0 200 GB HD as storage. The 200 GB one is slowly
dying a death so I thought I'd put the essential files I need to keep
on the Western Digital HD. It now has about 50% of the space used. Is
this likely to impinge on the performance of the computer at all?
Secondly, when I get a new 'storage' HD (any recommendations for a
reliable 200+ GB HD welcome...), would there be any significant
performance loss by putting this new HD in the PC case and linking it
into the unused SATA connector rather than having it as an external box
running through USB 2.0?
As you can no-doubt tell, I know bugger-all about these things, and any
help would be appreciated.
Thanks again,
Roger Melly.
I've hunted around for a clear answer to my questions, but to no avail,
so I'm going to ask here. I hope this is the right place. I will also
be opening myself up to enormous amounts of ridicule, but I can handle
that. Here goes:
Does the performance of a hard drive decrease as it becomes fuller? I
have a SATA 35 GB 10,000rpm Western Digital HD as a boot drive (NTFS)
and an external USB 2.0 200 GB HD as storage. The 200 GB one is slowly
dying a death so I thought I'd put the essential files I need to keep
on the Western Digital HD. It now has about 50% of the space used. Is
this likely to impinge on the performance of the computer at all?
Secondly, when I get a new 'storage' HD (any recommendations for a
reliable 200+ GB HD welcome...), would there be any significant
performance loss by putting this new HD in the PC case and linking it
into the unused SATA connector rather than having it as an external box
running through USB 2.0?
As you can no-doubt tell, I know bugger-all about these things, and any
help would be appreciated.
Thanks again,
Roger Melly.