carlos700 said:There are Serial ATA Hard Drives for Notebooks now, in fact I believe a Eurocom 900 Phantom uses them.
BoardCertified said:My MacGenius roomie says that an increase in RPM will be negligable to battery life, but he doesn't know of any HD for iBook over 7200RPM.
Duff-Man says...well, if we are not helping to your satisfaction, perhaps you can try doing your own searches of various drive manufacturers websites and online dealers etc etc and then report back to us....oh yeah!BoardCertified said:Come on people, you're not helping! I am quite aware of 5400RPM 80-100G drives available and even 7200 RPM 60-80G drives.
You have your answer, you just don't seem to want to accept it 🙂 The Hitachi 7200 RPM 80 GB drive is the fastest/largest notebook drive at this time (there may be drives speced the same from other manufacturers).BoardCertified said:Come on people, you're not helping! I am quite aware of 5400RPM 80-100G drives available and even 7200 RPM 60-80G drives.
Can we do any better than 7200RPM yet? or at least 100-140G 7200RPM?
As a side note:
There is rumored to be a 15000RPM EIDE drive capable of installing Windows XP on a PeeCee in under 9 minutes.
I've had the Hitachi 7200 RPM drive in my TiBook for nearly a year without any problems. It runs 24x7 (folding). I put the original drive in a fw enclosure and now use it as a cloned disk backup.BoardCertified said:I appreciate the help of all of you - the previous post was a bit more sarcastic than anything else since a few people were dancing around the issue.
80 @ 7200PRM is nothing to sneeze at I suppose.
---to answer the "heat-on-lap" ratio to "HD RPM" question:
MacGenius roomie says absolutely no correlation whatsoever. SPIN-AWAY junkies, spin-way. 😀
daveL said:I've had the Hitachi 7200 RPM drive in my TiBook for nearly a year without any problems. It runs 24x7 (folding). I put the original drive in a fw enclosure and now use it as a cloned disk backup.