captaincharisma :
hamada.hosny93 :
10tacle :
I don't understand what you are trying to find out. I have three different drives on my PC: one 3.5" HDD, one 2.5" SSHD (hybrid hard drive with some SSD memory on board), and one SSD (obviously 2.5"). Each drive responds differently only based on how fast it can be read from the PC. As others say, your PC does not care about the difference in drive type (or size). It only responds to the performance differences in the drive - faster access for faster drives, slower access for slower drives. Having a 5400RPM drive will not slow down your 7200RPM drive or an SSD for that matter.
I don't know how I can make it any more clear. Maybe you are thinking of RAID requirements where drives have to be the same make speed? You can mix a 5400RPM drive and 7200RPM drive in RAID, but that 7200 drive will only run at 5400 in RAID. If you just simply have each different drive connected directly into your motherboard's SATA ports, it's a non-issue.
My question was not that hard to understand, its very clear, was just asking about how the HDDs will respond in case of having different speeds? everyone on its own speed or there is a shared speed for all HDDs, but anyways you almost solved my problem, I understand now that when i access a 7200 RPM drive so the speed will be 7200 RPM and same for 5400 RPM, thanks anyways.
nope, sorry i still do not understand. the drives are not combined where a file is spread across both drives they are 2 seperate HDD's.
even if you did combine the drives which you can do with a RAID 0 array the speed differences still would not matter
I will try to be more clear, If i have 2 HDDs installed on my PC, one with 7200 RPM, the other with 5400 RPM speed, what speed expected to deal with when i ask to access one of them? everyone with its own speed or there will be a shared speed for all ??
By other ways: if i asked to access the HDD with 7200 RPM, will i got access by the same speed?
same thing with the HDD with 5400 RPM.
Got it ?