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For a new laptop, will two internal drives affect battery performance that much more than one drive? It is better to have one drive for OS/programs and one drive for data, but will that drain the battery that much more that it's not worth two drives on a laptop?

6 Answers 6

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It won't drain that much more the battery. What is draining battery is the LCD backlight, the CPU, and the GPU (in some cases, for this one).

If you use a program like Notebook Hardware Control to force cpu, gpu to lower frequencies during battery mode, and lower your backlight, this will increase the duration. However, not much difference with two hard drives, in comparison to these ones.

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There will be some additional power draw, but as already pointed out the screen backlight is likely to be a more significant drain.

Unless you really really need the extra space, I would not separate OS and data onto two drives. The point (usually) of having two drives in a high-end developer machine is be able to mirror them (RAID 1) to give much faster read speeds, as well as some degree of redundancy against hardware failure. Ideally you need a machine with a simple hardware RAID chipset rather than doing this in the OS.

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The question is most laptop does not provide extra room to hold another hard driver without external special device.

It doesn't matter if you store OS/programs in one driver or sperate the two and store in difference driver.

You could update the hard driver.I think 500GB should be enough for most developing work.

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  • He is not asking about possibility of 2 hard drives, but about the power difference. And he has his idea about separating OS/programs and data, he wasn't asking if that is a good idea or not, no need to try and change him.
    – Gnoupi
    Nov 7, 2009 at 14:09
  • you can customize a Dell with two internal(320GB or 500GB) drives
    – anon
    Nov 7, 2009 at 14:09
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    My laptop has 2 x 250GB HDDs. It's not uncommon, especially at the bigger screen sizes (17"+).
    – Macha
    Nov 7, 2009 at 15:46
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How about for Virtual Machines? Wouldn't it be better two have two drives where the VM is on the data drive?

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Logically, it must use twice the power of having a single hard drive, assuming you are accessing data on both all of the time.

If you use one less frequently, the OS may put that drive to sleep which would save a little.

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If you're worried about power drain, why not make at least one of the "hard drives" a solid-state drive? Lower power use, lighter, faster ... and of course more expensive.

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