Western Digital currently offers the highest capacity on a conventional laptop hard drive with a 9.5 mm z-height. All others have yet to hit this capacity point. WD has also been the first with 750GB and 1TB capacities on 2.5” drives, but these are based on a 12.5 mm height. Is the highest capacity drive also the fastest drive?
According to WD’s 95.6 MB/s throughput, it is, although Samsung’s Spinpoint M7E is close behind. The only drives that deliver higher throughput are those running employing a 7,200 RPM spindle speed. WD’s 47.2 MB/s minimum throughput is also best in class. That’s not the case for access time, although all four drives are close to each other. The 750GB Scorpio Blue delivers around 100 I/O operations per second, which is good, even if Toshiba and Seagate are faster.
The WD drive has the lowest active idle power requirement at only 0.6W. All others require 0.7W to 1.0W. If you were to compose a capacity per watt index, it would be obvious which drive dominates. Power during HD video playback is a bit higher than on the other drives (1.2W compared to 1.0W to 1.1 W). In the end, WD offers the best throughput and performance per watt on throughput.
- Notebook Hard Drives Closing In On 1TB
- Samsung Spinpoint M7E HM641JI (640GB)
- Seagate Momentus 5400 (640GB)
- Toshiba MK6465GSX (640GB)
- Western Digital Scorpio Blue WD7500BPVT (750GB)
- Test Setup And Comparison Table
- Throughput Diagrams
- Benchmark Results: Throughput And Interface
- Benchmark Results: Access Time And I/O Performance
- Benchmark Results: PCMark Application Performance
- Benchmark Results: Power And Efficiency
- Conclusion


