iPeak Business Application Tests

Our iPeak Winstone benchmarks offer a glimpse into how well our hard disk drives will handle general office applications, media encoding, and graphics manipulation. While the business applications that are being tested tend to be more CPU bound at times, the performance of the hard drive can and will make a difference in the more disk intensive video and graphics applications where large media files are typically being edited.

iPeak - Pure Hard Disk Performance

iPeak - Pure Hard Disk Performance

As expected the WD Raptor drives finish at the top in our business application tests as their 10k RPM spindle speed and optimized cache play an important role in their ability to sustain high transfer rates, especially in the Content Creation benchmark where transfer block sizes are significantly larger and more random than in the Business application benchmark. We see our WD74ADFD finishing ahead of the WD1500ADFD in the Content Creation benchmark where write operations account for a large portion of the test and just barely trailing in the Business Winstone test that emphasizes small block sizes of data in non-sequential order.

iPeak General Task Tests

The iPeak based General Task benchmarks are designed to replicate utility based application tasks that typically are disk intensive and represent common programs utilized on the majority of personal computers. While the WinRAR program is very CPU intensive it will typically stress the storage system in short bursts. Our antivirus benchmark will stress the storage system with continual reads and sporadic write requests while the defragmentation process is split between continual read and write requests.

iPeak - Pure Hard Disk Performance

iPeak - Pure Hard Disk Performance

iPeak - Pure Hard Disk Performance

iPeak - Pure Hard Disk Performance

The WD740ADFD slightly trails the WD1500ADFD in our AVG and Defragmentation tests with results that mirror the PCMark 2005 testing. The WD1500ADFD performs better in tests slanted towards read operations while the WD740ADFD performs as well or better in write operations due to slightly better sustained transfer rates. Our WD740GD is unable to keep up with the other Raptor drives - or for that matter several of our other drives that contain the larger 16MB cache sizes. This is especially true in the WinRAR tests where large cache sizes are very advantageous for improved performance.

PCMark05 Performance Multimedia and Gaming Performance
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  • DrMrLordX - Wednesday, February 7, 2007 - link

    That article certainly changed my perspective on Raptor performance. It's clear that the older 74 gig Raptor just can't hang with the big boys. I had heard that the new 74 gigger was the fastest, but your results seem to refute that entirely. The 150 gigger wins out more often than not.
  • the Chase - Wednesday, February 7, 2007 - link

    Yeah I'm glad AT did this review as haven't seen much on the new 74GIG model. Now what I'd LOVE to see is how the new 36GIG models do in all of this and how 2 of them in RAID would compare to the bigger drives.

    Any chance of slipping in the new 36GIG model sometime Gary?

    Thanks for the review.:)

  • Gary Key - Thursday, February 8, 2007 - link

    Hi,

    We will have numbers on the 36GB ADFD in the next roundup. Also, we will be updating our RAID article from 2004 to see if the landscape has changed in regards to RAID 0 performance on the desktop but more importantly taking a serious look at RAID 1, 0+1, 10, and 5 on today's motherboard chipsets. We plan on this in March but the next HD article to go up will include the new 500GB drives from all suppliers.
  • DigitalFreak - Wednesday, February 7, 2007 - link

    I find it surprising that the older model 74GB Raptor beats the new 74GB model in nearly every test.
  • DigitalFreak - Wednesday, February 7, 2007 - link

    heehee Never mind. I got the model numbers mixed up. :-)
  • Jedi2155 - Wednesday, February 7, 2007 - link

    I find it even more interesting that a 320 GB 7200.10 beat out a 750 GB 7200.10 in a number of benchmarks.

    I also appreciate the mention of the Dell OEM Raptors with myself being a proud owner of a 160 GB Raptor :). (Which I got for a mere $160)

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