Western Digital VelociRaptor 1TB (WD1000DHTZ) Review
by Anand Lal Shimpi on April 16, 2012 8:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Storage
- HDDs
- Western Digital
- VelociRaptor
There was a time when Western Digital's Raptor (and later, the VelociRaptor) was a staple of any high-end desktop build. Rotational media could only deliver better performance by increasing aereal density or spindle speed. In a world dominated by hard drives that focused on the former, WD decided to address both. By shipping the only mainstream (e.g. not SCSI or SAS) 3.5" hard drive with a 10,000 RPM spindle speed, WD guaranteed that if you needed performance, the Raptor line was the way to go.
Two years ago we met the most recent update to the VelociRaptor line: the VR200M. While it raised the bar for the VelociRaptor, WD saw its flagship competing in a new world. SSDs were now more affordable, resulting in even more desktop builds including an SSD. Although the high dollar-per-GB cost associated with SSDs demanded that desktop users adopt a two-drive model (SSD + HDD), for storage of large media files a standard 5400RPM or 7200RPM drive was just fine. After all, moving large files is mostly a sequential operation which plays to the strengths of most consumer drives to begin with.
There are still users who need more storage than an SSD can affordably provide, and who demand speed as well. Although photo and video editing is great on an SSD, a big enough project would have difficulty sharing a 128GB SSD with an OS, applications and other data. For those users who still need high performance storage that's more affordable than an SSD, the VelociRaptor is still worthy of consideration. There's just one problem: Moore's Law is driving the cost of SSDs down, and their capacities up. The shift to solid state storage is inevitable for most, but to remain relevant in the interim the VelociRaptor needed an update.
Today Western Digital is doing just that. This is the new VelociRaptor, available in 250GB, 500GB and 1TB capacities:
WD VelociRaptor Historical Comparison | |||||
WD VelociRaptor VR333M | WD VelociRaptor VR200M | WD VelociRaptor VR150M | |||
Capacity | 1000/500/250GB | 600/450GB | 300/150GB | ||
Interface | 6Gbps SATA | 6Gbps SATA | 3Gbps SATA | ||
Advanced Format (4K Sectors) | Y | N | N | ||
Rotational Speed | 10000 RPM | 10000 RPM | 10000 RPM | ||
Buffer Size | 64MB | 32MB | 16MB | ||
Transfer Rate Buffer to Disk | 200 MB/s | 145 MB/s | 128 MB/s | ||
Platter Density | 333GB | 200GB | 150GB | ||
Warranty | 5 years | 5 years | 5 years |
The basic design remains unchanged. Take a 2.5" drive with platters spinning at 10,000 RPM and pair it with a 3.5" adapter that also acts as a heatsink. Internally the drive gets all of the expected updates. Platter density is now up to 333GB (3 platters for the 1TB drive, 2 for the 500GB drive and 1 for the 250GB). All members of the new VelociRaptor family feature a 64MB DDR3 cache. Combine that with some firmware updates and you've got a recipe for larger capacities and higher performance.
The drive is available today and retails for $319 for the 1TB model, $209 for the 500GB model and $159 for 250GB. These prices are a bit lower than what the VelociRaptor VR200M launched at two years ago (the 500GB is significantly cheaper than the old 450GB launched at).
WD VelociRaptor Lineup | ||||||
WD1000DHTZ | WD5000HHTZ | WD2500HHTZ | ||||
Capacity | 1TB | 500GB | 250GB | |||
MSRP | $319.99 | $209.99 | $159.99 | |||
Cost per GB | $0.319 | $0.419 | $0.639 |
Compared to standard 3.5" drives, the VelociRaptor is quite expensive. You can buy a 3TB 7200RPM drive at roughly $0.06 per GB, compared to $0.319 per GB for the most cost effective VelociRaptor. Compared to an SSD however, the VRs are still cheaper - although not by a ton if you compare to a low capacity drive. Samsung's SSD 830 (128GB) will cost you $1.36 per GB.
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bozdee - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
Anand, you've used the French spelling for 'cheap' down the bottom of the first page - great writeup otherwise!Sufo - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
Cheaper? The comparative form of cheap? I didn't realise this was French.PyroHoltz - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
Huh?cheaper(French) --> cheaper(English)
http://translate.google.com/?hl=en&q=cheaper%2...
Mr.T - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
There is no French spelling for cheap (or cheaper or cheapest); Cheap translates to "Pas cher" (Not expensive) or "Bon marché" (Good deal) in French.dananski - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
IIRC, bon marché is often mistakenly translated literally to well priced / good deal, but it actually means cheap - an indication of qualitiy as well as price. Quite amusing for the Bon Marché chain of clothes shops in the UK, which obviously aims for the former interpretation, or for an assumption that a Frenchy sounding name makes it well posh.safcman84 - Wednesday, April 18, 2012 - link
Where did you get that from?Bon Marche means good deal. There is no French word for Cheap.
Mr T got it right.
bigboxes - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
In English, something that could be considered inexpensive would be called "cheap." In a comparison of the cost of two or more items the item that is cheapest would be called "cheaper". Next time, stay awake in class. LOLbozdee - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
When the article was first published it read "... however, the VRs are still cheape ..." and has been changed since. When I saw 'cheap' written as 'cheape' it reminded me of how a French person would say the English word 'cheap'.It all made sense in my head but I could see how my choice of words (or lack thereof) led to all of the comments below. All I really wanted to do was correct the typo.
Tunnah - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
..The Raptor holds fond memories for me, when I first got enough money to build a serious rig, I used the original Raptor as my boot drive.It always stood out as the geek's bootdrive, and WD could easily reclaim that title if they coupled it with some NAND.
I'd ditch my primary SSD in a heartbeat if they released a VR HDD/SDD combo drive!
Makaveli - Monday, April 16, 2012 - link
Good luck with that.I wouldn't care if they slapped a 1GB of ram on the hard drive its still a hard drive.