by Charles Jefferies

Spindle Speed

 
Spindle Speed
 Reference Guide - Hard Disk Drives 

As hard disks become more advanced, virtually every component in them is required to do more and work harder, and the spindle motor is no exception. As discussed in detail here, increasing the speed at which the platters spin improves both positioning and transfer performance: the data can be read off the disk faster during sequential operations, and rotational latency--the time that the heads must wait for the correct sector number to come under the head--is also reduced, improving random operations. For this reason, there has been a push to increase the speed of the spindle motor, and more than at any other time in the past, hard disk spin speeds are changing rapidly.

At one time all PC hard disks spun at 3,600 RPM; in fact, for the first 10 years of the PC's existence, that was all there was. One reason for this is that their designs were based on the old designs of large, pre-PC hard disks that used AC motors, and standard North American AC power is 60 cycles per second (60 Hz): 3,600 RPM. In the early 1990s manufacturers began to realize how much performance could be improved by increasing spindle speeds. The next step up from 3,600 RPM was 4,500 RPM; 5,400 RPM soon followed and became a standard for many years. From there speeds have steadily marched upwards. Usually, faster PC hard disk speeds "debut" on SCSI drives that are used in higher-performance applications, and then filter down to IDE/ATA a few years later. 7200RPM is now the standard for consumer desktop hard drives; some drives even have variable RPMs to save power. Most notebook hard drives are 5400RPM however 7200RPM is becoming increasingly commonplace. This table shows the most common PC spindle speeds, their associated average rotational latency, and their typical applications as of 2010:

Spindle Speed (RPM)

Typical Current Applications

4,200

A common 2.5" laptop drive speed in the late 90s/early 2000s, now only seen in 1.8" drives

5,400

The standard for 2.5" laptop drives and some higher-capacity 3.5" consumer desktop drives

7,200

The standard for consumer 3.5" desktop drives and high-performance 2.5" laptop drives

10,000

Found in high-performance SAS enterprise drives; rarely found in consumer space

15,000

Enterprise-grade SAS drives only

Note: This table is a basic overview only; not all speeds are listed here. The listed numbers cover the vast majority of drives currently available.

Increasing spindle motor speed creates many design challenges, particularly aimed at keeping vibration and heat under control. As discussed here, when the motor spins faster these become more of an issue; some high-end drives have very serious heat, vibration and noise problems that require special mounting and cooling work to allow them to run without problems. To some extent, there is a tradeoff between spindle speed, and the heat and noise issue. Engineers generally focus on keeping these matters under control, and usually improve them significantly after the first generation of drives at any given spindle speed. However, in some applications, using a slower and quieter drive can make sense.

Next: Continuous Power vs. Peak Power at Spin-Up