I am very surprised at the benchmarks. If you read the reviews on storagereview.com about the particular drives it seems that the seagate is not a favorite.
[EDIT]
Well, I can't compare apples to oranges. The drives that they reviewed were the 16MB cache versions. The WD that ships with the iMacs is 8MB
Yeah, benchmarking the WD drive is not fair comparison using an external enclosure. Even FW800 is much slower than native SATA.
Here are the xbench results of the same stock WD 320gb drive (albeit in a 20inch iMac):
While I do have 2x the RAM, it shouldn't affect the disk performance I wouldn't think.
So, upgrade for capacity... not speed.![]()
just because usb 2.0 has that bandwidth doesn't mean a hard drive can get that bandwidth. A drive in an external enclosure will not come close to an internal drive. It takes different paths through the computer and such. The Hard Drive controller on the logic board for the hard drives is setup to process the hd requests and it has better connections to the rest of the system. So you have the overhead of the drive going through the usb controller on the logic board. Plus many external enclosures aren't great either and so you have slow down there also. Then the OS also is optimized first for HD's connected by sata,ide, scsi. USB is just a medium for adding things.
You can never compare the speed of a drive that is internal to one that is in an external enclosure. You're access times will suffer the most as well as transfer speed.
Now if you had the drive hooked up with an eSata connector I believe that would come pretty close but alas the imac doesn't have a spot to connect it.
And no the amount of memory won't impact the scores the test should be straight cpu to hd as its not really writing anything useful to the drive.
DOH! I was so focused on the task at hand that I completely forgot to look at the back of the LCD for the make/model.![]()
Take your iMac apart again and look!! Answer the guys question!!! Jeez....
SLACKER!!
(that's humor folks! Tom has enormous cajones!)
JimmyD
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Funny you should mention that JimmyD... See post above... <Evil Grin>![]()
My project expanded a bit last night... so now I have the Panel Make/Model:
My machine has an LG/Philips Model LM240WU2 (SL/B1)
Here is a shot of the label:
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Thanks for this!
So what did you do to your iMac?
I knew there was no way that the WD320gb was *that* slow. I'm sure that a Raptor could be made to look lousy in a USB external enclosure. Somewhere within the USB->SATA bridge chip of just limitations of USB 2.0, you're just not going to get any kind of performance out of USB 2.0 and disks.
FW400 is better, FW800 even better - but still not at par with native SATA (or PATA).
Is the SATA II/PATA interface the same (in terms of bandwith/speed/capability) in both Notebooks and Desktops?
Also why are desktop drives much faster than their notebook counterparts?
holy crap it doesn't seem right how slow the old drive was.
EDIT: I see the old drive was hooked up externally. Thats not really a fair comparison
I am amazed that you were the first with the balls to take it apart. You are da man!
It's good to see that the HDD is not too hard to replace. How about the CPU though, is it swappable when fast quad core chips are available in a year or two? I'm guessing nobody is prepared to take the warranty sticker off the heatsink yet to find out![]()
I wouldn't replace a Western with a Seagate, no way! Seagate are now the noisest drives on the market since they were pressured into removing Acoustic management from all drives since 2003 (ish) because of the patent breach.
Yeah, benchmarking the WD drive is not fair comparison using an external enclosure. Even FW800 is much slower than native SATA.
Here are the xbench results of the same stock WD 320gb drive (albeit in a 20inch iMac):
![]()
While I do have 2x the RAM, it shouldn't affect the disk performance I wouldn't think.
So, upgrade for capacity... not speed.![]()