The boot partition is located on a mechanical or hybrid drive?

shyam1986

Commendable
Feb 12, 2017
7
0
1,510
Dear Friends,
Recently i upgraded my graphics card only. After checking my system in User benchmark i found bad performance results only in Boot Drive. " Moving the system to an SSD will yield far faster boot times". What is SSD? i am having only Little Knowledge and not a technical Talented in Computer field. So can anyone please what Booting problem i am accurately facing. I searched Lot in Websites but everyone explained in Technical way . I cant understand some Technical Words. For Crazy Still i dont know the Exact difference between HDD and SSD .Please Explain how to Rectify from this issue.

""Sorry For the Bad English....!""

My System Configurations are as follows.
UserBenchmarks: Game 72%, Desk 66%, Work 53%

CPU: Intel Core i7-6700 - 87.3%
GPU: Nvidia GTX 1060-6GB - 75.5%
HDD: Seagate Barracuda 7200.14 1TB - 101.8%
RAM: Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600 C10 2x8GB - 61.7%
MBD: Asus H170M-E D3
OS : Windows 8.1

 
Solution
Userbenchmark is a flawed tool. You are not experiencing ANY problem.
There is no 'issue' to 'rectify'.

All that says is that if you were to change the C drive (the OS) to be on an SSD, things would work a little faster.

A HDD like what you have (and the vast majority of the planet) is relies on spinning platters. This is where your data resides.
An SSD is all solid state, and is 'faster'. But far more expensive per GB of drive space.
Userbenchmark is a flawed tool. You are not experiencing ANY problem.
There is no 'issue' to 'rectify'.

All that says is that if you were to change the C drive (the OS) to be on an SSD, things would work a little faster.

A HDD like what you have (and the vast majority of the planet) is relies on spinning platters. This is where your data resides.
An SSD is all solid state, and is 'faster'. But far more expensive per GB of drive space.
 
Solution