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Date:      Wed, 19 Sep 2007 19:50:40 -0500
From:      Derek Ragona <derek@computinginnovations.com>
To:        jekillen <jekillen@prodigy.net>, FreeBSD Mailing List <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Hard drive RPM
Message-ID:  <6.0.0.22.2.20070919194836.02689a78@mail.computinginnovations.com>
In-Reply-To: <7f28909c2f575ccd98796e2af18d4e05@prodigy.net>
References:  <7f28909c2f575ccd98796e2af18d4e05@prodigy.net>

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At 07:47 PM 9/19/2007, jekillen wrote:
>Hello;
>Is there a utility for measuring the effective RPM of a hard disk?
>A software tackometer?
>I have IDE drives, SATA drives, both 7200 and 10,000 RPM,
>as well as SCSI disks that are supposed to be running at 15k
>RPM. I noticed that on the hard drive labels, those on the disk
>case itself do not specifically indicate what speed they are supposed
>to operate at. The two 10k SATA drives only had labels on the
>antistatic packaging indicating that they are 10k drives. I would
>like to verify the speeds of these drives. I am hoping that this is
>not a case of misrepresentations that I have found on network
>attached hard disk storage devices and Firewire drives.
>I have one that was expressly advertised on the package to be
>120 Gb capacity, and in fact only 111Gb are available for storage.
>That is a 9 Gb discrepancy. A Fire wire drive I have is also designated
>as 120 Gb and actually only has 117 Gb usable capacity.
>Like 9Gb is enough for several operating systems. 3Gb is even
>enough for an operating system.
>
>Can anyone shed some light on this? (Storage device labeling,
>and specifically, RPM specs)
>
>I would ask the manufacturers but would be suspicious of bias
>responses. That is what I got from one of them already.
>
>Thanks in advance for responses.
>The hard drives in question are running on FreeBSD systems
>on homebuilt hardware. All AMD64 processors, ECS, Gigabyte,
>and ASUS motherboards, Hard drives are Western Digital IDE,
>SATA, and Seagate SCSI drives.
>
>Jeff K

Run the manufacturer's diagnostic utility to check the drives speed and 
performance.  Most of these utilities also give you the drive model and 
serial number as well.  Look for a self-booting version that is a cd-rom 
ISO, these usually run FreeDOS to easily access the hardware from a cd-rom 
boot image.

         -Derek


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