Intel Philippines lent me an SSD last week after pulling out that gaming rig. So I thought I’d upgrade my laptop’s hard drive with the SSD.
The sample SSD was just the 40GB Intel X25-V SATA SSD and though the capacity was low, I was more curious how it compares to traditional hard disk drives.
The drive is almost the same size as the regular 2.5″ disk drives for notebooks but the SSD is significantly lighter.
My laptop’s current drive is a 250GB Western Digital Scorpio Blue and the drive compartment was readily accessible at the back side with just a couple of screws away.
Switching the drive was quick and easy and I got me installing Window 7 Ultimate to the new drive in 15 minutes. Took several tests and benchmarks for the Intel SSD and compared it with the HDD.
The results above are based on PassMark Performance Test to determine the seek speed, read and write speeds (in MB per second). The SSD scored very high on random seek and sequential read.
I also took the rating from Windows Experience Index with the SSD scored a 7.7 while the HDD got 5.6. Using PassMark again, here are the Disk Mark ratings for both the SSD and the HDD.
The laptop definitely got some nice performance boost based on the results above (wasn’t able to compare boot time though).
SSDs are still very expensive compared to regular SATA disk drives. I don’t have the price for the 40GB Intel SSD but the 160GB is selling for around Php23,000USD 392INR 33,226EUR 373CNY 2,854 in TipidPC and CDR King used to sell a 64GB SSD for about Php5,800USD 99INR 8,379EUR 94CNY 720.
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Jon says:
I’ve read somewhere that SSDs don’t last that long. There were even some netbooks using SSDs that broke down after quite some time. I’d still go for an HDD. Cheaper, more capacity, and more reliable.
lolipown says:
^
If money is not an issue, SSDs are quite worth the premium especially when you’re using it on a system (Windows 7) that properly manages SSDs and HDDs.
IC DeaDPiPoL says:
Most likely those netbooks were using a journaling file system which resulted in frequent writes.
BTW did the test laptop have a longer battery life when running under SSD compared to HDD?
manaka_junpei says:
maganda sana ang SSD pero hindi ko sure kung mag-shift tayo sa SSD, the only problem is gaano katagal ang SSD compare sa HDD pagdating sa longterm operation. Maganda kung magsimula ka sa maliit na storage kung ok ba ang loading time nang Windows mo
cornflakes says:
I use SSD on my site’s server. It works like a charm :)
manong says:
“money is not an issue”
– statements usually made by a michael jackson wanna be spender
Miguel says:
@Jon – I believe those early netbooks were not using SSD flash, but regular thumbdrive type flash.
lolipown says:
@manong
nice try but you gotta learn how to roll
fr0stbyte says:
@manong
Out of context, you are.
Adrian says:
the price is not that good :(