Mark Knecht wrote:
While none of this directly applicable to what you
are experiencing,
when I read your note it seemed similar enough to go ahead and write
back. It might not only be the type of files system, but also where on
the drive you are writing. It's not always that well known, but most
drives are 30-50% slower at the far end of the drive. Most drives are
speed rated when they are empty.
Without knowing anything about the details of
hard drive conception, I would think that ALL
drives are much slower for tracks near the
axe than on the border of the disks, since
the speed is proportional to the distance track->axe.
This is inherent to any system using a disk and having
constant angular speed.
I know that even windows
95 tried to put the data on the borders of the disks of
an hard drive as long as it could. I am pretty sure linux does the same.
cheers,
David