The VelociRaptor takes a strange form, but it's 35 percent faster than previous generation Raptor drives.
Western Digital has announced the VelociRaptor, a drive that it claims to be the world’s fastest SATA hard drive. And if that’s not enough, the company says it has “
a 35 percent performance increase over the previous generation [Raptor drives].”
The drive takes form in a 2.5-inch housing with two 150GB platters spinning at 10,000 RPM packing a total of 300GB of storage. What’s more Western Digital says the drive is built with “
enterprise-class mechanics”—just like the previous generation Raptor hard drives that held the performance crown for so long.
Despite its form factor, this drive is not designed for notebooks and comes enclosed in a Western Digital IcePack – a 3.5-inch mounting frame with a built-in heatsink, enabling the drive to fit in standard 3.5-inch hard drive mounting bays. However it also seems that some reviews mention that removing this heatsink voids also the warranty!
"
Demand for ever-higher PC performance continues to increase and WD is the leader in this category with the WD Raptor. We created WD VelociRaptor hard drives to lead PC enthusiasts into the next era of PC and Mac storage performance and satisfy their insatiable thirst for computing speed," said Tom McDorman, vice president and general manager of WD's enterprise business unit. "
The new WD VelociRaptor delivers the greatest performance and reliability of all SATA hard drives currently on the market."
The
VelociRaptor builds on the foundations laid by the original Raptor drives and feature a 16MB cache. What’s more, they’re the first Raptors to support the SATA 3Gb/sec interface, which should provide some advances in performance.
Western Digital has also added support for Rotary Acceleration Feed Forward and SecurePark. The first is a technology that WD claims “
optimises performance when the drives are used in a vibration-prone, multi-drive chassis,” while the latter ensures that the recording heads are parked off the disk surface during spin up, spin down and when the drive is off. The company says that “
this ensures the recording head never touches the disk surface, resulting in improved long-term reliability and increased drive protection when the chassis is moved.”
The WD VelociRaptor will first be available in Alienware’s high-performance ALX gaming desktop machines at the end of April and will then be available for DIY customers to buy separately by mid-May at a suggested retail price of $299.99 USD, according to a statement released by the hard drive maker.
WD’s claims are pretty lofty, but based on
some of the reviews that we’ve already seen, the drive appears to live up to expectations. Will you be looking to purchase one of these drives when they become available? Let us know
in the forums.
Sam
Edit. Scan UK have these listed on their site here. Uk Price is £252.61
I remember seeing SCSI drives that went 15000RPM and up to 300GB at said speed. perhaps they could be a better buy for the speedfreaks(in addition to a suitable raid card for SCSI connector{s})
still, 300gb of super fast storage is very tempting, even at that price premium.
It's enterprise level for consumers.
Seriously? the price premium is 6x... I'd much rather have a 1.5TB raid10 array than one of those, it'd be about the same price.
But then they aren't exactly meant to be good bang for buck now are they
Yea and get hit with tax, vat and import duty. So you would end up paying about £350 anyway.
Would be nice to see 150GB and 74GB models on the way, home users don't need 300Gb of fast storage.
ditto.
(Also $1 a GB doesn't sound bad to me. Especially for Raptor speed?)
In a typical config you would have a raptor as an OS & app drive and a fast 7200rpm drive for games and storage
these infact http://www.custompc.co.uk/labs/114085/samsung-spinpoint-t166-hd501lj.html
super fast and happy with them, too little too late for the raptors as most people i know are looking at raid 0 if they need perfromace.
Also as the HDDS increase in size platter density increases so times seek/read times decrease so the cap between normal HDDs and raptors will fall
True, but the gains you see in daily use are next to nothing. Unless you actually have enterprise-level needs (RAW HD video footage or photoshopping insanely huge files), the bottleneck still tends to be the computer pondering about what it should do with the data for a while.
i have to disagree.
on paper (im not 100% sure), the data output rate of any component in your computer is significantly higher than your harddrive. therefore, increasing a significant boost to ur HD rate (if ur coming from a barracuda 7200.9 to this velociraptor)(i love that name btw), will boost ur overall performance by a significant value as well.
on practice, coming from 80gb 7200.9 to 2x80Gb RAID-0 feels a heck lot more than 'next to nothing'. <disclaimer: results may vary :P>
Ditto as well.
EDIT:
http://www.techreport.com/articles.x/14583/2 <- in between the two pics. Now we just need a single platter 74 gig model that's limited to the outer half of the surface and the speed graph will fall down even less :D
any 74GB drive released would just be a single sided single platter drive
And 8 in a server sounds something akin to an FTL drive spinning-up. Not really ideal - these new Raptors are a good comprimise.
Most current gen 7200 rpm drives are as fast or faster for desktop use than the latest and greatest 15k drives
Is this how HDD's are supposed to be run, I have always put them in with the PCB facing down?
the speed is noticable, basically on reducing load times. but you have to decide if saving 10 seconds on game loads and maybe 15 or so on windows is worth it to you.
I've been waiting for WD to come up with something faster than the old Raptors. I will be getting a couple of these to replace my current Raptor RAID.
Edit: Just read the Storage Review review, bugger me that's a fast drive.
They stuck the heatsink on for ease of mounting in a 3.5" bay. The only issue running one of these in a laptop would be the height.
but Raptors are never good value for money, Sammy F1 and WD 640GB looks to perform on par in almost everything apart from seek time.
but i really dont need that much storage for a system disk and its just too much :(