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I am putting a new build together and it will have a 128 GB SSD for the C: drive and a 640 GB SATA2 HDD for data (D).
The data consists of 1) infrequently accessed stuff (Office files mostly and music), 2) frequently accessed photos, and 3) DVD rips (which will be deleted once burned to a DVD).
Is there any performance advantage to partitioning the HDD into 3 (D,E,F), one for each of the above, rather than just having 3 folders on the D: drive?
The data consists of 1) infrequently accessed stuff (Office files mostly and music), 2) frequently accessed photos, and 3) DVD rips (which will be deleted once burned to a DVD).
Is there any performance advantage to partitioning the HDD into 3 (D,E,F), one for each of the above, rather than just having 3 folders on the D: drive?
My Computer
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- home built
- OS
- Windows 7 Professional
- CPU
- AMD Athlon 64 3800+
- Motherboard
- Asus A8N-SLI Premium
- Memory
- 4GB OCZ DDR400 PC3200
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI Radeon x700 Pro
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung LCD
- Hard Drives
- WD 250gb SATA
WD 320gb SATA
WD 640gb SATA
Seagate 350gb SATA