Transform 'Cuda 7200.11 1.5tb into Velociraptor Killer

Silencing hard drives, optical drives and other storage devices

Moderators: NeilBlanchard, Ralf Hutter, sthayashi, Lawrence Lee

MikeC
Site Admin
Posts: 12285
Joined: Sun Aug 11, 2002 3:26 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Contact:

Transform 'Cuda 7200.11 1.5tb into Velociraptor Killer

Post by MikeC » Wed Jul 15, 2009 4:40 pm

Transform 'Cuda 7200.11 1.5tb into Velociraptor Killer

TechWare Labs posted a mod article by Artiom that transforms a $120 Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 1.5TB into a speed demon that outperforms a $230 VelociRaptor 300GB in almost every way. The mod only requires the use of Seagate's own Sea Tools utility... and turns the 1.5TB drive into a 300GB drive. (This is reversible.) Apparently, setting the size to 20% of max capacity makes use of only "the inside 20% of the disc, thus bringing superior performance."
Last edited by MikeC on Thu Jul 16, 2009 6:37 am, edited 2 times in total.

chahahc
Posts: 75
Joined: Tue Oct 23, 2007 7:52 pm
Location: The Most Mexican Place in the U.S.A

Post by chahahc » Wed Jul 15, 2009 5:03 pm

Wow....That is impressive. But I don't really get how downsizing the drive increases performance.... :?

Wonder if there would be even more of a performance boost if it was downsized more....150gb or even 100gb for example.... :D

plympton
Posts: 229
Joined: Sun Mar 14, 2004 11:40 am

Post by plympton » Wed Jul 15, 2009 5:19 pm

chahahc wrote:Wow....That is impressive. But I don't really get how downsizing the drive increases performance.... :?

Wonder if there would be even more of a performance boost if it was downsized more....150gb or even 100gb for example.... :D
Or what's the "breakeven" size - Can you get 500 GB and EQUAL a Velociraptor? 800 GB? I wonder how it picks it's cylinders that it uses? Does it prefer a single platter (doubt it), or start from the middle and work it's way out of all platters equally?

-Dan

40974111
Posts: 76
Joined: Wed Jun 03, 2009 3:51 am
Location: Sydney

Post by 40974111 » Wed Jul 15, 2009 6:15 pm

Does anyone have one of these Seatgate drives lying around that they can apply the mod to and a velociraptor, and want to do a subjective noise comparison for us?

Spare Tire
Posts: 286
Joined: Sat Dec 09, 2006 9:45 pm
Location: Montréal, Canada

Post by Spare Tire » Wed Jul 15, 2009 6:16 pm

I didn't read the article but i imagine i know what it's about. It's called short stroking. It's old like the planet, but with each generation it gets better and better. The same can be achieved with partitionning. You can always put the data partitions in the inner disc, and if it doesn't access it often, the stuff on the outer rim (OS most notable, and programs) will be as fast as this article would claim. Except that if you benchmark it that way, it wont give you the results you get from doing it with seatools because it will bench the whole disc.
By the way, i would imagine you mean the 20% OUTER disc, where the linear velocity is highest for an equal angular velocity.

MikeC
Site Admin
Posts: 12285
Joined: Sun Aug 11, 2002 3:26 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Contact:

Post by MikeC » Wed Jul 15, 2009 6:21 pm

Spare Tire wrote:By the way, i would imagine you mean the 20% OUTER disc, where the linear velocity is highest for an equal angular velocity.
Emphasis mine. They wrote it, I quoted them. ;) I think you're right.

psiu
Posts: 1201
Joined: Tue Aug 23, 2005 1:53 pm
Location: SE MI

Post by psiu » Wed Jul 15, 2009 6:39 pm

I just want to know where I can get that $230 300TB Velociraptor drive at! :shock: :wink:

mdk77777
Posts: 1
Joined: Wed Jul 15, 2009 7:51 pm
Location: IN

Post by mdk77777 » Wed Jul 15, 2009 7:56 pm

At Newegg look it up No URL post for me:(

With free shipping
:lol:

ilovejedd
Posts: 676
Joined: Tue Oct 21, 2008 4:14 pm
Location: in the depths of hell

Post by ilovejedd » Wed Jul 15, 2009 8:04 pm

psiu wrote:I just want to know where I can get that $230 300TB Velociraptor drive at! :shock: :wink:
There are 300TB drives available?! I want one, too! :P

tehcrazybob
Friend of SPCR
Posts: 356
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 8:56 pm
Location: Council Bluffs, Iowa
Contact:

Post by tehcrazybob » Wed Jul 15, 2009 8:56 pm

I'm not sure I see the point of the article. The Velociraptor isn't noted for its sequential performance, which can be approached, if not matched, by a great many high-capacity drives. It's noted for ridiculously short seek and random access times, which make the computer more responsive in day-to-day use. Short-stroking a high-capacity drive doesn't dramatically improve its seek time, because the drive still has to wait for the platters to complete an average of half a rotation to bring data to bear. All this achieves is to hold data in the outer portion of the disk where the sequential rates are higher. There are certain situations in rendering, data serving, and heavy number-crunching where this can produce a significant benefit. On a personal desktop computer, the only tangible effects are a smaller drive with more impressive synthetic benchmark results.

bradc
Posts: 37
Joined: Sat Feb 07, 2009 7:30 pm
Location: Auckland New Zealand

Post by bradc » Wed Jul 15, 2009 9:37 pm

Why go into the seatools program? Ever heard of partitioning? That way you can still get all of the space you paid for too! Admittedly software like hddscan will see past that and benchmark across the entire physical hdd so the random access times in the report will still be quite high.

Another way of doing it would be to get a couple of drives (I'd choose 7200.12 myself) and using Intel Matrix Raid or similar and use that to partition off the first 100gb or whatever you feel like and Raid 0 them or something. Hddscan will only 'see' the first 100gb of each hdd and will report extremely quick results including random access. The ultimate result will be that you win the benchmark tests :D In real life there probably won't be much of an advantage.

Does raise some interesting questions about a pair of 320gb or 500gb 7200rpm 2.5" hard drives though doesn't it? Quiet, vibration free, and reasonably quick?

fyleow
Posts: 175
Joined: Sun Sep 11, 2005 4:23 pm
Location: California, USA

Post by fyleow » Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:04 pm

People buy the Velociraptor for the lower access time due to the higher rotational speed. A random access time of 10.3 ms does not outperform the velociraptor's 7.2 ms.

AFAIK Seagate drives tend to be slower so I'm not sure why they used those. The 640GB WD blue has a seek time of ~12 ms with no short stroking and short stroking it to 200-300 GB should give you ~10 ms.

Vietor
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Aug 24, 2006 7:51 pm
Location: California
Contact:

Post by Vietor » Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:41 pm

"that outperforms a $230 VelociRaptor 300TB in almost every way."

Every way but the most important one: seek time.

Moreover, in a real world desktop condition using a reasonable filesystem, you will frequently benefit more from having the extra space so that the filesystem can avoid fragmentation than you would from the guaranteed sequential speed performance that you get from short stroking.

In nearly every situation that effects the desktop user, faster sequential read speed will basically only make fast operations faster. Anything that is taking a significant amount of time is either a very special case, like large file copy from another local disk, or almost certainly seek-limited.

Matija
Posts: 780
Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2007 3:17 am
Location: Croatia

Post by Matija » Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:44 pm

Even if seek time was equal, the Velociraptor would stil pwn a short-stroked drive in real-world usage... Why? Because it has better firmware.

Anyway, like people have said already, it's called "partitioning".

autoboy
Posts: 1008
Joined: Fri Dec 10, 2004 8:10 pm
Location: San Jose, California

Post by autoboy » Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:48 pm

I thought the article would tell me how to get a 10K rotation speed out of the 7200.11. As it is written, i am not impressed.

kater
Posts: 891
Joined: Thu Sep 07, 2006 11:20 pm
Location: Poland

Post by kater » Wed Jul 15, 2009 11:30 pm

First thing that I thought of was "did they really run the Seagate at, say 18V, to accelerate the motor to 10k rpm? woooow, coool!" :lol:

Olaf van der Spek
Posts: 434
Joined: Tue Oct 04, 2005 6:10 am

Post by Olaf van der Spek » Thu Jul 16, 2009 2:34 am

The author doesn't really seem to understand what he's talking about. The fastest part of the disks is the outside, not the inside.
As someone else already mentioned, partitioning is the better way to go.
'Virtual' partitioning would be even better, where you only have one partition but could tell the OS to store certain directories / files (like movies) at the end of the disk. Unfortunately I don't know of any OS / FS that can do that.

KadazanPL
Posts: 144
Joined: Mon Apr 27, 2009 9:58 am
Location: Poland

Post by KadazanPL » Thu Jul 16, 2009 3:54 am

Sorry for my ignorance, but wouldn't setting up a RAID array offer both performance and storage capacity at the same price? Say two 750GB drives working in RAID 0?

I think that the entire idea described in the article is just art for art's sake.

yacoub
Posts: 139
Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2005 7:49 pm

Post by yacoub » Thu Jul 16, 2009 5:32 am

On the downside, supposedly these 1.5TB drives, like a number of recent Seagate models, are trash (i.e., have poor quality control and higher-than-normal rates of failure).

dhanson865
Posts: 2198
Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2005 11:20 am
Location: TN, USA

Post by dhanson865 » Thu Jul 16, 2009 5:33 am

1. Partitioning is much simpler to do

2. What is up with the Seagate 7200.11 love from this guy? You could do the same short stroking by one or more methods with a Samsung HD502HI or Western Digital WD6400AAKS. There is no magic to buying the specific model or brand he mentioned or magic to buying any drive I mentioned. Buy a drive format it for less than the full capacity and enjoy the speed benefit.

I've found on the drives I've tested recently the first 20% of the drive capacity has a pretty flat transfer rate graph. If you want max speed just format the drive to 20% capacity. If you want more space pick the trade off you want, something in the 20% to 50% range will still give you noticeable improvements but the higher you go the slower those access times and sustained transfer rates will get.
Last edited by dhanson865 on Thu Jul 16, 2009 5:35 am, edited 1 time in total.

yacoub
Posts: 139
Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2005 7:49 pm

Post by yacoub » Thu Jul 16, 2009 5:33 am

autoboy wrote:I thought the article would tell me how to get a 10K rotation speed out of the 7200.11. As it is written, i am not impressed.
It's arguably more impressive to get the same/better performance without needing to increase the rotational velocity.

tehcrazybob
Friend of SPCR
Posts: 356
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 8:56 pm
Location: Council Bluffs, Iowa
Contact:

Post by tehcrazybob » Thu Jul 16, 2009 5:48 am

yacoub wrote:[It's arguably more impressive to get the same/better performance without needing to increase the rotational velocity.
It certainly would be. Unfortunately, the modification described in the article actually doesn't achieve a worthwhile performance improvement at all - read back through the responses in this thread discussing seek time.

trandy1001
Posts: 64
Joined: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:05 am
Location: Rhode Island

Post by trandy1001 » Thu Jul 16, 2009 6:19 am

outperforms a $230 VelociRaptor 300TB in almost every way.
The Velociraptor would be rather impressive if it were 300TB, amusing thought. Small nitpick.

Personally, I am happy with the stock speeds of modern hard drives, and I would like all the capacity I can get.

nutball
*Lifetime Patron*
Posts: 1304
Joined: Thu Apr 10, 2003 7:16 am
Location: en.gb.uk

Post by nutball » Thu Jul 16, 2009 6:28 am

Way back when I really cared about these things I used to partition my drive

- partition for OS + programs
- partition for swap
- partition for everything else

the idea being that in effect the OS and swap live on the outer sectors of a short-stroked drive. All my other stuffs were on the lower peformance part of the disc, but who needs tip-top performance for playing MP3s?

mczak
Posts: 147
Joined: Wed Jul 21, 2004 6:13 pm

Post by mczak » Thu Jul 16, 2009 6:41 am

If you're really interested in short stroking, there was a much better article (with a different emphasis but still) here: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/sho ... ,2157.html

Metaluna
Posts: 133
Joined: Wed Mar 12, 2003 2:47 pm
Location: USA

Post by Metaluna » Thu Jul 16, 2009 9:42 am

Couldn't you just short stroke the Velociraptor too and get even better performance?

prodeous
Posts: 90
Joined: Sun Nov 30, 2003 8:01 pm
Location: Poland
Contact:

Post by prodeous » Thu Jul 16, 2009 10:54 am

Well I am wondering from a different perspective.

Since we are here at the SPCR website, it would be interesting to see if this alteration has any benefits from audio and power side.

Is SPCR thinking of doing their own analysis?

Also last comment. Short Stroking the Velociraptor.. That would be impressive to see.

jessekopelman
Posts: 1406
Joined: Tue Feb 13, 2007 7:28 pm
Location: USA

Post by jessekopelman » Thu Jul 16, 2009 11:18 am

prodeous wrote: Since we are here at the SPCR website, it would be interesting to see if this alteration has any benefits from audio and power side.
There is one simple benefit to both. Faster transfer means certain tasks get accomplished faster and the drive can be returned to its idle state (which will be quieter and consume less power). The real question is how much time are we actually talking about in real-world scenarios? Most people aren't continuously writing/reading giant files from their primary drive (and if they were the loss of capacity from short-stroking would be too big a drawback). Also, the Windows OS like to pretty much continuously keep the drive in use with the random writing and reading of OS files, so completing our large tasks faster still won't get us back to idle state for long.

As many previous posters have noted, short-stroking is fairly pointless. The real benefit of higher RPM drives is fast random operations. Faster sustained operations are certainly nice, but not at the expense of drive capacity, which is going to be very important on drives that do a lot of sustained operations.

MoJo
Posts: 773
Joined: Mon Jan 13, 2003 9:20 am
Location: UK

Post by MoJo » Thu Jul 16, 2009 2:37 pm

This is beyond stupid.

drees
Posts: 157
Joined: Thu Jul 13, 2006 10:59 pm

Post by drees » Thu Jul 16, 2009 3:59 pm

jessekopelman wrote:so completing our large tasks faster still won't get us back to idle state for long.
The primary benefit of short stroking a drive is to reduce seek times. For example, short stroking their 450GB 15k SAS drive to 45GB cut seek times from 6ms to 3.8ms. For the 250GB 7.2k SATA drive short stroking to 34GB cut seek times from 17ms to 10ms.

Those are substantial improvements in seek times.

There are also substantial improvements in raw through put, too (the SATA drive had a minimum of 55MB/s at full capacity but stayed over 90MB/s when short stroked, but for most people, raw throughput isn't what limits system performance, random IO is.
Last edited by drees on Fri Jul 17, 2009 12:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Post Reply