I really like these Random Read data, but I am somewhat disappointed in Sequential Read/Write speed □ Looks like traditional drives are a much better deal right now. Uncached Read 259.96 48.24 MB/sec Īccording to the poster, the overall score is the highest of any harddrives tested. While I don't have SSD, your request sparked my interest. Thanks for a star, that was very nice of you □ Next week I am getting WD Scorpio (traditional one, 5400, not the newest Black Scorpio 7200) which is supposed to be on par with smaller 7200 drives. Looks like 7200rpm deserves extra money you spent. Uncached Read 79.66 14.78 MB/sec Īs you can see, in most cases your new harddrive trashes mine! :P General consumer computer disks rarely need to service more than one or two requests at a time making this measure particularly well suited to servers. Just for comparison - my results: Xbench 1.3, stock harddrive (Hitachi, 120GB, 5400rpm): 4K 64 thread write speed is a measure of how well a device can write random 4K blocks of data at a queue depth of 64. Naturally, Random (means slower than Sequential) Uncached (means slower than Cached) Write speed would be quite low. If you have a 7200 RPM drive (preferably Seagate), I'd love to know if these are normal and if anything might be wrong. OS X benchmarks Geekbench Xbench Battery life. I ran the application a couple times and got similar results each time, so I'm posting the last test. Hz Core I5 8GB 128GB SSD MacOS Catalina at the best online prices at eBay. The only section where I was worried was Random Uncached Write speed, which got a score of 7.82 and ran at 0.83 MB/s. I can't tell if these results are normal or not, so I wanted to post them and see what people thought. I booted up, downloaded XBench, and ran it. It is the basic 15' configuration with the only things changed are the screen, which is high-res glare and changed the keyboard layout from Dutch (I live in The Netherlands) to English International. The installation went smoothly, and I restored from a Time Machine backup to the new drive. Dear Corsair, Last week I bought the Corsair Force 3 180GB SSD for my MacBook Pro I purchased just a few weeks ago. To summarize this, for the RAID0 has twice the throughput in general, except for reading random or sequential 4K blocks. I recently installed a new 7200 RPM 200 GB Seagate drive in my 15" 1.8 GHz Intel Macbook Pro.
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