Quote:
Originally Posted by czezz
Can anyone explain me is this true: that disk the smaller is the faster is ?
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By smaller do you mean number of Gigabytes? (And not physical size)
Within the same series (same phys size), different sizes of disks are normally made by having different numbers of platter surfaces active, so a 300 G drive may have two and a 450 three.
The speed (how measured? just don't worry about that yet) decreases as you get closer to the centre of the disk, so the outer sectors are faster.
However, sometimes, largely for marketing reasons, but sometimes to deal with batches of platters which have defective regions, the manufacturers sometimes sell drives with lower-than-their-potential-capacity. When they do this, they will preferentially disable the slower parts of the disk. So if, in the previous example, if you saw a 400 G disk they would have disabled some, probably the slower parts, of a 450 G disk (and probably that 450 G disk, using 3 surfaces, was probably physically a 600 G/4 surface disk with a whole bad surface disabled or maybe even without magnetic coating on that one surface).
The other way of looking at this phenomenon is that a larger percentage of the disk is the fast stuff.