iPEAK Business Application Tests

Our iPEAK Winstone benchmarks offer a glimpse into how well our hard disk drives will handle general office applications, media encoding, and graphics manipulation. While the business applications that are being tested tend to be more CPU bound, the performance of the hard drive can and will make a difference in the more disk intensive video and graphics applications where large media files are typically being edited.

IPEAK - Pure Hard Disk Performance

IPEAK - Pure Hard Disk Performance

The WD Raptor drives finish at the top in our business application tests as their 10k rpm spindle speed and optimized cache play an important role in their ability to sustain high transfer rates, especially in the Content Creation benchmark where transfer block sizes are significantly larger and more random than in the Business application benchmark. The Samsung 500GB drive is about 7% slower in the Business Winstone and 4% in the Content Creation Winstone than the Hitachi drive but once again places ahead of the Seagate drive.

iPEAK General Task Tests

The iPEAK based General Task benchmarks are designed to replicate utility based tasks that typically are disk intensive and represent common programs utilized on the majority of personal computers. While the WinRAR program is very CPU intensive it will typically stress the storage system in short bursts. Our antivirus benchmark will stress the storage system with continual reads and sporadic write requests while the defragmentation process is split between continual read and write requests.

IPEAK - Pure Hard Disk Performance

IPEAK - Pure Hard Disk Performance

IPEAK - Pure Hard Disk Performance

IPEAK - Pure Hard Disk Performance

The Samsung drive performs consistently across these four general task benchmarks. While not the fastest 500GB drive in any of the tests, the drive never finishes last. In fact, the SpinPoint's performance is never more than 6% off the pace of the other 500GB drives with an average finish within 2% of the top drive in this storage capacity. Not bad for a drive that costs less than its competitors.

PCMark05 Performance iPEAK Video/Audio and Gaming Tests
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  • 8steve8 - Sunday, July 15, 2007 - link

    ive had 2 of these drives for 8 months now,, so the review seems late.


    obviously the new samsung 1TB 3platter drives are immensly interesting.

    the specs and samsungs history in this market makes it seem to be the drive to have in the next 12 months.

  • natebsi - Wednesday, July 11, 2007 - link

    I've purchased 3 of these drives, and 2 have failed in about 4 months time. One was in my pc, the other was in an external enclosure. (The one still working is in my HTPC).
    2 out of 3 failures in such a short time is pretty bad.

    However... the reason I won't be buying any more Samsung drives is not because they failed, but because they don't have an advance replacement program. That was fairly shocking to me! I took it for granted after sending it failed drives to Maxtor and WD (both of whom have outstanding service when it comes to that, BTW).

    Hard drive failures are a given, and I can't deal with that. A drive failure is too critical a problem to wait for a replacement more than a couple days. In my opinion anyway...
  • Final Hamlet - Thursday, July 12, 2007 - link

    Backup + cooling = No need to worry.

    I remember having a 20gb Western Digital Caviar, which did me the favour of giving me a special sign that it had come near the end of it's life, so I could replace it in time. If only all HDs could issue that kind of warning...
  • TA152H - Wednesday, July 11, 2007 - link

    Oh boy. Useful to know this. I guess I will wait to buy them.

    You're a lot more forgiving than I am. I really hate hard drive failures, because they take so long to recover from. It's the worst type of failure in my opinion. And also, because I'm stupid and go a few days without doing a proper backup sometimes. So, for hard disks, I value reliability more than any other part (except maybe the power supply, which tends to screw up a lot of things further down the food chain).

    The replacement policy shows that Samsung doesn't quite get it. They don't seem to understand how important reliability is, or how important it is to get someone up and running again as quickly as possible. I always carry a spare or two if it's for a RAID array, but Samsung is selling these to residential people too, and no one likes being without their computer, and they aren't going to keep spare hard disks.
  • natebsi - Thursday, July 12, 2007 - link

    It's not that I'm forgiving, its more that I've excepted the fact(or at least high probability) that any hard drive I buy today, from any manufacturer, will fail. Maybe tomorrow, maybe the next day, maybe 5 years from now.
    So as a consequence, I am extremely diligent about backing up my data. I use both RAID and a backup service from mozy.com for the most important data.
    Also, I hear a lot of talk about how "Maxtor sucks!" or "Seagate sucks" or "<insert manufactuer> sucks!". The simple fact of the matter is: Without factual data from the hard drive makers themselves, there will NEVER be any method of determining which hard drive manufacturers are the most reliable. And none of them will ever produce that data for obvious reasons.
    Case in point: I've had more hard drives than I can even remember in the last 15+ years, and I truly can't think of "the best manufacturer". Every time I've thought I had a great series of drives, I had failures at some point that made me rethink it. So...... backup, backup, backup, and go with the company that provides the best warranty, service, etc. Which, IMHO, ain't Samsung.
  • TA152H - Thursday, July 12, 2007 - link

    Well, you have some factual data from Seagate, look at their warranty.

    Hard drives can fail, but I have had none from Seagate fail, and this included drives over 5 years old, actually, some over 10. And this goes back to the ST-255 and ST-251, although you'd have to low level them every few years because they were steppers. Crashtors I never bought, but they were so widely recognized as bad, it was way past anecdotal. IBM's drive problems were also not anecdotal, they were widely publicized and even recognized by IBM. Western Digital's were similar, although I don't remember exactly what Western Digital did to fix it. I had bought two of their drives around that time, and both died as well. So, it's not just people blabbing, some of it is very clearly bigger than that. I have never seen Seagate get into that situation, and they sell a lot of drives.

    I actually did have a Seagate fail, but it was some 10K monster made in the 1990s, and it was left in a garage for about three years. I can't really blame it for that, it probably got stepped on and kicked and slept on by a raccoon. But, it worked before it's garage experience. Having used well over 200 Seagate hard drives over the years, just my own, not for a company, that's not a bad success rate, especially since the ones in my main machines I don't change often. The one on this machine is from 2001, and doesn't make a sound and is on 24/7. Try that with a Samsung.

    I do agree, back up early and often. I forget to sometimes though, I wish I didn't, but I do. You really have no control over it, it can happen any time, so the only way to address that truly is to make sure the impact of it happening is limited. But, I'm a moron, I don't do it as often as I should, and I just don't seem to be able to get into the habit of it.
  • Gary Key - Tuesday, July 10, 2007 - link

    I am not too impressed with the Hybrid drives and Vista right now. ;) We will have that review up next week.
  • crimson117 - Monday, July 9, 2007 - link

    How do I read the full blurb? On the main page, I see
    quote:

    "Our first look at Samsung's latest SpinPoint T166 drive reveals a quick and affordable drive... oh yeah, did we.."

    but I can't find anywhere that shows the remainder of the text. It's not anywhere in the article.
  • crimson117 - Monday, July 9, 2007 - link

    I found the whole blurb when I do a search for the article.
  • Frumious1 - Monday, July 9, 2007 - link

    If you click on the storage header that will take you to a page where you can see all the intro text for those articles - same goes for the other areas, of course. Not like it really matters much, does it?

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