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Hard disk drive

General

Typical hard disk drives (HDD) come in various sizes (1.8", 2.5", 3.5") and speeds (4200 - 7200 rpm). There is always one in the computer, but a second HDD can be also external through USB 1.1, USB 2.0 or Firewire. External HDD's are mostly used as fast backup, because with USB 2.0 and Firewire the data transfer rate comes close to that of an internal HDD.
Apart from the typical IDE-disk, there are SCSI-drives (speeds 10- 15000 rpm, transfer 40 Mb/s and higher) and Solid-state-disks(SDD). The latter feature SDRAM memory (e.g. 4 x 256 Mb). In professional versions (4000 EUR) they have a SCSI interface, power backup and conventional backup IDE-disk, but there are also popular versions (1000 EUR) that fit the PCI-slot. Here we will only discuss IDE-disks.

Protocol

IDE Bus (Integrated Drive Electronics) is the most common low-cost interface for Hard Disk Drives (HDD), CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs, etc.. The official specification for the IDE interface is ATA (AT Attachment). Depending on maximum transfer speed that is supported (in MB/s= Mbytes/s ) we distinguish ATA/33, ATA/66, ATA/100 and ATA/133.

Performance parameters

Functional characteristics that PC manufacturers show in their folders are maximum transfer speed (ATA) storage capacity (15-120 Gb) and (sometimes) access time (10-20 milliseconds) or speed. In consumer tests, the data transfer rates are also tested ( 10

40 Mb/s with average 15-20 Mb/s).
Energy consumptionPresently, 3.5" HDD's use around 5-10 W during read/write, depending also on speed. The 2.5" versions use less than 2-2.5W and as external hard disk don't need an external power supply with USB (max. 500 mAh/ 5V). The operating hours of the HDD depend very much on the type of use. In the BatteryMark test for a P-4 laptop the 2.5" HDD used on average 1.2 W during typical Windows operation. A typical 3.5" might use twice as much (2.4 W). Taking the latter as the typical standard practice 2000, the energy that can be attributed to a HDD is about 14-15 kWh/PC/yr (at 600 hrs. of annual use).

Courtesy of the French Energy Agency ADEME, Future Electronics project.

 

 


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