If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10.
Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? -- Sputnik |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
In article , Evgenii Sputnik
wrote: Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? no. I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? non-issue, but get another laptop with ssd for the performance and reliability benefits. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
On 22/07/2018 20:30, Evgenii Sputnik wrote:
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? Only if t gets very hot. Heat and magnetic media are not generally compatible. So you are into positions these days? Do you still do position 69? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and How do you do this? Is your disk external? If so then consider the heat aspect. Apart from damaging the HDD, it might catch fire while you are asleep!!!!!!!!!!! plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? If the HDD comes with a HDD then why should it not work? Can you explain this? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? No. We don't use machines for some stupid purposes. Machines are supposed to be used on a desk when doing some serious work. There aren't many people using a laptop in their bed but you'll always find some idiot coming here to post that they do it all the time. /--- This email has been checked for viruses by Windows Defender software. //https://www.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/comprehensive-security/ -- With over 950 million devices now running Windows 10, customer satisfaction is higher than any previous version of windows. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
On Mon, 23 Jul 2018 02:30:33 +0700, Evgenii Sputnik wrote:
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? No problem on my netbook - in use about 8 years. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
"Evgenii Sputnik" wrote in message
news Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? Not a problem, as far as I am aware. Some PCs are designed so they can be used either as a tower (tall and thin) beside the monitor, or horizontally with the monitor on top. They even have a CD drive with lugs that support a CD disc if the tray is vertical, which reinforces the idea that it is safe for the PC to be on its side. Some PCs (especially servers) even have the hard disc bays (if there is more than one) vertical when the PC is in normal tower config. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
On 2018-07-22 21:30, Evgenii Sputnik wrote:
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? Yes. I have a bunch of external disks powered and working in vertical position (one side) for years. And I just bought one external disk in which the disk is positioned vertically, in the long direction. However, I do remember perhaps more than a decade ago some disk I bought recommending horizontal position or one particular side and not another for vertical position. Those disks were smaller than 500 GB, so you can guess their time. -- Cheers, Carlos. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
On 22-7-2018 21:30, Evgenii Sputnik wrote:
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? About 15 years in an instrumented car. Google for : ICACAD (INSTRUMENTED CAR FOR COMPUTER AIDED DRIVING ... |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
Evgenii Sputnik wrote:
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? SSD drives can take any orientation. ******* Rotating HDD are "six axis stable". https://www.seagate.com/www-content/...100737930b.pdf 3.3 DRIVE MOUNTING You can mount the drive in any orientation using four screws in the side-mounting holes or four screws in the bottom-mounting holes. At one time, the description for hard drives may have been worded differently (made more of a reference to the six axis). That document is from the year 2014. You can probably find other Seagate documents of that sort, to find the wording they used ten years ago. Paul |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
On Mon, 23 Jul 2018 02:30:33 +0700, Evgenii Sputnik
wrote: Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? It will work fine. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
On 22/07/2018 20:30, Evgenii Sputnik wrote:
Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? DON'T BE SO SILLY |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
critcher wrote:
On 22/07/2018 20:30, Evgenii Sputnik wrote: Hello alt.comp.os.windows-10. Does it hurts for a HDD to always be in vertical position? I spend most time on laptop with SSD in vertical position (in bed), and plan to eventually buy a laptop with HDD, but will it work? Or it is a no-go? Have anybody used hard drive for long time in this unnatural way? DON'T BE SO SILLY Since this is a Windows 10 group, it's probably fair to point out, the new laptop should also have an SSD. Windows 10 works better with an SSD to compensate for being "busy" right after boot time. The zero seek time is the parameter of interest. The mechanical shock-resistance is a secondary feature. This 128GB drive is big enough for Win10 with room to spare, and is $53. SSDs don't have to be too expensive. The 545S isn't the absolute best you could buy (it stops responding at "End Of Life"), but I picked one up to use for sneakernet-transfers. It doesn't hide the fact that it uses TLC flash. https://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...N8&ignorebbr=1 Paul |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
HDD in vertical position.
Paul wrote: Since this is a Windows 10 group, it's probably fair to point out, the new laptop should also have an SSD. If it has an M.2 slot (of the right type) then an SSD in there plus a larger spinning HD might be an option. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|