This is kind of a recommendation thread. As I want to know what people have with their setups.
I know most steam games can range from 70 to 120 GB per game. And that's not really good enough for the standard that they use. They sell solid state drives NVMe that are really fast I admit. And they got the size down really good.
But the problem is. First of all for my setup. I have a partitioned OS that is near 570GB for the NVme hard drive. Or near 1 TB for the operating system. But that doesn't seem to be enough these days for hard drive storage. So I'm assuming most people use a secondary hard drive on their computer. I don't know if they use the NVMe SSD as their secondary drive, and that's good enough for them. But when I type in hard drive 10TB, I get results on amazon for 8TB Sata that are Sata for a good average price, I believe in my opinion.
The stats for that drive are this:
"Seagate BarraCuda 8TB Internal Hard Drive HDD – 3.5 Inch Sata 6 Gb/s 5400 RPM 256MB"
Is this fast enough for games and video editing?
Or do most people sacrifice the space for a Solid State Drive and get something that is 1 to 2TB only for games and video editing? It seems you would only have room for 10 games.
I do think capacity is more important. It just seems getting a Sata that isn't solid state as a secondary hard drive. It feels a bit outdated to still have a platter internal hard drive.
Although, they did manage to make the size of the hard drive really small. They didn't really perfect the overall average size of the drive to meet the demands of how space we need for the NVme type hard drives. I'm kind of new to NVme drives. They could have increased size to match the cost and the capacity.
What is your setup that you guys use and your recommendation?
I have also looked into the USB external drives. I heard they are unrealiable and prone to damage and problems of it disconnecting and reconnecting and not properly operating in USB 3.0 mode.
And another odd thing is. I'm lucky because I got the case that supports it. They have 3.5 inch drive bays in. Although when I put hard drive bay enclosure cover on it. It doesn't close properly and that's how you break a SATA connector on a hard drive. So it's kind of hanging there. I can probably find a custom solution for that later. My case is Fractal Design Focus G Mid-Tower Case.
What I'm really asking is what is your setup. And is the "Seagate BarraCuda 8TB Internal Hard Drive HDD – 3.5 Inch Sata 6 Gb/s 5400 RPM 256MB" good enough for transfer speeds for video editing and possible gaming? I mean it still has platters in it.
Just in case it matters my specs are this:
Gigabyte B650M Gaming Plus wifi.
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7600X CPU
Memory: 32GB T-Force RGB DDR5
1TB Kingston NV3 SSD. OS drive.
I know most steam games can range from 70 to 120 GB per game. And that's not really good enough for the standard that they use. They sell solid state drives NVMe that are really fast I admit. And they got the size down really good.
But the problem is. First of all for my setup. I have a partitioned OS that is near 570GB for the NVme hard drive. Or near 1 TB for the operating system. But that doesn't seem to be enough these days for hard drive storage. So I'm assuming most people use a secondary hard drive on their computer. I don't know if they use the NVMe SSD as their secondary drive, and that's good enough for them. But when I type in hard drive 10TB, I get results on amazon for 8TB Sata that are Sata for a good average price, I believe in my opinion.
The stats for that drive are this:
"Seagate BarraCuda 8TB Internal Hard Drive HDD – 3.5 Inch Sata 6 Gb/s 5400 RPM 256MB"
Is this fast enough for games and video editing?
Or do most people sacrifice the space for a Solid State Drive and get something that is 1 to 2TB only for games and video editing? It seems you would only have room for 10 games.
I do think capacity is more important. It just seems getting a Sata that isn't solid state as a secondary hard drive. It feels a bit outdated to still have a platter internal hard drive.
Although, they did manage to make the size of the hard drive really small. They didn't really perfect the overall average size of the drive to meet the demands of how space we need for the NVme type hard drives. I'm kind of new to NVme drives. They could have increased size to match the cost and the capacity.
What is your setup that you guys use and your recommendation?
I have also looked into the USB external drives. I heard they are unrealiable and prone to damage and problems of it disconnecting and reconnecting and not properly operating in USB 3.0 mode.
And another odd thing is. I'm lucky because I got the case that supports it. They have 3.5 inch drive bays in. Although when I put hard drive bay enclosure cover on it. It doesn't close properly and that's how you break a SATA connector on a hard drive. So it's kind of hanging there. I can probably find a custom solution for that later. My case is Fractal Design Focus G Mid-Tower Case.
What I'm really asking is what is your setup. And is the "Seagate BarraCuda 8TB Internal Hard Drive HDD – 3.5 Inch Sata 6 Gb/s 5400 RPM 256MB" good enough for transfer speeds for video editing and possible gaming? I mean it still has platters in it.
Just in case it matters my specs are this:
Gigabyte B650M Gaming Plus wifi.
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7600X CPU
Memory: 32GB T-Force RGB DDR5
1TB Kingston NV3 SSD. OS drive.
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