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Does hard disk usage affect computer speed?


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Guest Danger_Duck
Posted

So this computer has 12 out of 19 GB used. Now, even after defragmentation,

do programs run slower simply because more of the hard disk has been used up?

 

For that matter, in general, how much is performance slowed down for every

fraction of disk used up? (Obviously a rather vague question, I guess I mean

if my total space is T, and an additional x space is used, on what order does

speed slow down if any?)

 

Thanks!

 

(In case you're wondering, I'm thinking of burning rarely-used data to blank

CDs, which I have a lot of).

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Guest Bob I
Posted

Re: Does hard disk usage affect computer speed?

 

 

 

Danger_Duck wrote:

> So this computer has 12 out of 19 GB used. Now, even after defragmentation,

> do programs run slower simply because more of the hard disk has been used up?

 

No

>

> For that matter, in general, how much is performance slowed down for every

> fraction of disk used up? (Obviously a rather vague question, I guess I mean

> if my total space is T, and an additional x space is used, on what order does

> speed slow down if any?)

 

None, unless you really fill it up.

 

>

> Thanks!

>

> (In case you're wondering, I'm thinking of burning rarely-used data to blank

> CDs, which I have a lot of).

 

 

I'd suggest DVD and make 2 copies.

Guest Ken Blake, MVP
Posted

Re: Does hard disk usage affect computer speed?

 

On Tue, 29 Jul 2008 07:11:07 -0700, Danger_Duck

<DangerDuck@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:

> So this computer has 12 out of 19 GB used. Now, even after defragmentation,

> do programs run slower simply because more of the hard disk has been used up?

 

 

No.

 

> For that matter, in general, how much is performance slowed down for every

> fraction of disk used up? (Obviously a rather vague question, I guess I mean

> if my total space is T, and an additional x space is used, on what order does

> speed slow down if any?)

 

 

Not at all. Think of it as a file cabinet drawer with either ten

folders in it or 50. It takes just as long to retrieve a document from

the folder labeled "2008" in either case. The disk drive works very

much the same way; access to it is random, and Windows can go directly

to the file it needs regardless of how much is used up.

 

Only when the drive is full, or nearly so, does it become a problem.

Windows will start running out of room for temp files, page file, etc.

Similarly, if your file cabinet drawer gets full, it gets tight and

very hard to remove or add documents.

 

> (In case you're wondering, I'm thinking of burning rarely-used data to blank

> CDs, which I have a lot of).

 

 

It doesn't hurt to do that, but it won't help performance.

 

 

--

Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience

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