Is the 5400RPM Hard Drive Really Slow?

I watched a few videos on YouTube with iMac unboxings and they tend to include speed tests. One fellow ran Black Magic Disk Speed Test on his 27" with a 3TB Fusion Drive and received write speeds in the upper 300s (http://www.yout u be.com / watch ?v=GgW4dpwblIA, about 2:07 into the video) and read speeds in the upper 400s. Someone with a 21.5 5400 RPM hard drive received speeds of about 90/95 read/write (http://www.you tub e.com/wa tch?v=a7 LliA7BBDI, it's about 2:50 into the video).


My older 2006 Core Duo iMac has an aftermarket 1TB 7200RPM hard drive with 400GB free and gets less than 100, typically in the upper 80s and 90s. It's neither possible nor practical to list every file and program, however I run a basic stock system with files and photos. Could it be that I have a defective drive or that the newer hard drives are simply more efficient? I planned on getting a Fusion Drive, however if the stock kit is better than my theoretically faster drive it might make sense to use that 250 to move up to the 27" or get a Thunderbolt drive…


That said, I can't tell if 5400 RPM is slow simply on spec or in real life because the reported results are faster than my 7200 RPM drive.

Posted on Mar 22, 2013 8:07 AM

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4 replies

Mar 22, 2013 10:12 AM in response to Scott Hampton

All things being equal, a 7200rpm drive will outperform a 5400rpm drive. But all things are never equal. And it's not just about the rpm's of the drive. So what's different? For starters that new 21.5" iMac has a 6.0 Gbps SATA-3 HD interface whereas your 2006 era iMac has a much slower 1.5 Gbps SATA-1 HD interface. I doubt there is anything wrong with your current 7200 rpm drive. You should look at the detailed specs. If it's a SATA-2 or SATA-3 hard drive, it will still be throttled to SATA-1 speeds because that's what's in your 2006 era Mac.


I wouldn't be surprised to find a new, nearly empty 5400rpm SATA-3 HD performing about the same or perhaps even slightly better than a 7200rpm SATA-1 HD that is 60% or more full (as yours is). Technically there may be additional influencers (like differences in the architecture of the two Macs and even the HDs themselves) but these are the biggies. Yes, the amount of data on your drive will eventually affect performance especially once you hit 50% of capacity. To do a fair comparison you would have to test your drive against a drive of exactly the same capacity and exactly the same amount of data on it as that new out-of-the-box 21.5" iMac. Something like 20GB.


And then there's the fusion drive, which combines an SSD with a hard drive, so depending on use, you may see disk i/o in the neighborhood of RAM access speeds there.

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Is the 5400RPM Hard Drive Really Slow?

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