Jun 30, 2020
21
1
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has anybody overclocked a hard drive like linus tech tips overclocked a fan? i feel like that would be pri-tee cewl
 
Solution
If you are familiar with Linus's videos you should check out the one where he went to the data recovery lab. There you can get a better idea of how complex, delicate, and difficult they are to tweak.

If you still want to mess around with HDDs speeds you can either get a few drives and put them in various RAIDs. Or you could do the same with SSDs. There's even a 4x "RAID" card for NVME drives.

The trouble is that day to day storage doesn't offer up much tangible once you've transitioned to SSDs.

Barty1884

Retired Moderator
There's not really an 'overclock' applicable to an HDD.
You can't make it physically go faster, like you could a fan - nor 'instruct' faster via software, like you could a CPU or GPU.

The best way to have an HDD perform better/faster/smoother is to keep it tidy, defragged etc - and periodic clean OS installs if being used as an OS drive..... nothing particularly special.

10000rpm drives exist(ed), which is essentially what you'd be trying to achieve - but SSDs rendered them near obsolete a long time ago, given the higher costs associated.
 
Jun 30, 2020
21
1
15
There's not really an 'overclock' applicable to an HDD.
You can't make it physically go faster, like you could a fan - nor 'instruct' faster via software, like you could a CPU or GPU.

The best way to have an HDD perform better/faster/smoother is to keep it tidy, defragged etc - and periodic clean OS installs if being used as an OS drive..... nothing particularly special.

10000rpm drives exist(ed), which is essentially what you'd be trying to achieve - but SSDs rendered them near obsolete a long time ago, given the higher costs associated.
you can't tamper with the insides? dang
 
If you are familiar with Linus's videos you should check out the one where he went to the data recovery lab. There you can get a better idea of how complex, delicate, and difficult they are to tweak.

If you still want to mess around with HDDs speeds you can either get a few drives and put them in various RAIDs. Or you could do the same with SSDs. There's even a 4x "RAID" card for NVME drives.

The trouble is that day to day storage doesn't offer up much tangible once you've transitioned to SSDs.
 
Solution