Besides the two primary performance defining characteristics?What happens if the transfer rate of an HDD is faster than an SSD? Will the HDD be faster?
What traits make an SSD better than an HDD, other than faster IOPS and faster write/read speed?
Does that mean that if an SSD and an HDD have the same speed, the SSD will be faster?Besides the two primary performance defining characteristics?
Rotational delay. SSDs have zero.
Think of it as teleportation.Does that mean that if an SSD and an HDD have the same speed, the SSD will be faster?
Yes. Say the HDD finishes reading 1/5 the way around the disk. It has to wait up to 4/5 the rotation speed to read the next requested data. Then there is seek time. That is moving the read heads across the surface of the disk. An SSD has neither of those things. That is the "driving" time that @USAFRet refers to above.Does that mean that if an SSD and an HDD have the same speed, the SSD will be faster?
Not with modern SSDs, some older ones were close in copying large files but that was more than 10 years ago. Greatest advantage of SSD is seek time that is almost instant but also that SSDs read and write thru 4 channels and HDDs one. Also short delay in positioning "Heads", HDDs do it mechanically and in SSDs are just virtual. For smaller files disk RAM cache is more beneficial for HDDs , larger is better so RAM would also be used to large extent. HDDs never exceeded SATA bandwidth but SSDs are hampered by it, often reading and writing faster than SATA could process, That's why NVME and PCIe interface is much faster than SATA. Higher (faster) version PCIe also give better NVME performance.What happens if the transfer rate of an HDD is faster than an SSD? Will the HDD be faster?
What traits make an SSD better than an HDD, other than faster IOPS and faster write/read speed?