HDD, SSD or Both?
The Complete Build Your Own PC Manual|July 2020
The storage capacity of your PC will be dictated by what you will be doing with it but even if you don’t think you will need much storage, the cost of storage has come down so much in recent years that it makes sense to choose more than you might need right now. The bigger question with storage these days is whether to go for a HDD, an SSD or perhaps both. Let’s take a look at the pros and cons of all these component choices.
HDD, SSD or Both?

START BUILDING

Hard Drive: Seagate 2TB Desktop SSHD

Build: Turn to page 72 to start installing your CPU

Making Your Choice

It is very likely that in a couple of years, Solid State Drives (SSDs) will be cheap enough to completely replace Hard Disk Drives (HDDs) but for most PC builders now, a compromise will need to be made between cost and storage capacity.

HARD DISK DRIVES

Standard hard disk drives work by writing data onto a stack of spinning discs within the case of the drive. These spin at certain maximum speeds and the faster the spin speed (RPM), the faster the data is written to and read from the discs. Most currently available HDDs work at a maximum of 7200rpm, but both slower (5400rpm) and faster (10000rpm) are available. A HDD is always the cheapest mass storage option for a PC build but it isn’t the fastest, nor the most efficient. Unless you need, for whatever reason, super quick read/write speeds, a SATA connected 7200rpm hard disk drive will be fine for first time builders.

Solid state drives

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The Complete Build Your Own PC Manual

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The Right RAM

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The Complete Build Your Own PC Manual

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Preparing the Case

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The Complete Build Your Own PC Manual

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The Complete Build Your Own PC Manual

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The Complete Build Your Own PC Manual

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