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Almost all external hard drives without power cords have a rotation speed of 5400 RPM or less. And the rare external hard drives without power cords that have a 7200 RPM have a ridiculously tiny amount of storage.

Also, why don't hard drives without power cords go above 200GB? What exactly is the power constraint?

2007-09-19 20:05:09 · 6 answers · asked by Jon 4 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

6 answers

The reason they don;t spin faster is because the USB interface can only provide so much power. trying to spin it to 7200 RPM would draw too much juice!

The capacity is due to the same thing. There are silver discs inside a harddrive called platters. The more storage in a drive, the more and larger platters there are. 200GB is probably the optimum storage to wieght (of the platters) ratio they cold find that would still stay under the power limits of the USB interface.

2007-09-19 20:15:20 · answer #1 · answered by Jason S 3 · 1 0

Those external drives are the ones that are used in laptops. They don't need as much power, so they can be run off the USB connection. However, this also means they spin slower and aren't as large (capacity-wise) as regular desktop drives.

Don't worry, though, these drives are still plenty faster than your USB 2.0 port.

2007-09-19 20:33:54 · answer #2 · answered by PoohBearPenguin 7 · 0 0

They are USB bus powered drives that are typically suited for laptops- laptops that power your drive would go dead faster with a drive higher than 5400 RPM.

The small portable drives that are USB powered almost always have a notebook drive installed in the case for power consumption management for your battery powered laptop.

2007-09-19 20:55:45 · answer #3 · answered by StuArtNJ 2 · 0 0

First of all haven't u heard about usb2 technology, usb1 technology was built just for flash drives, Keybords,etc. the new USB2 technology will make the new external drive run faster.

there 500 GB out there but to expensive. got the idea

2007-09-19 21:10:48 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

USB 2.0 only has 5 volts and low amps so it can't handle the power draw of bigger faster hard drives.

2007-09-19 20:27:47 · answer #5 · answered by s j 7 · 1 0

Not in that size. Typically the ones that draw their power from the USB cord only are much smaller.

2016-05-19 00:40:01 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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