When I was reviewing it for publication I ran a couple of tests and found more like 18 on the devices I tested, but I’m sure there are some that do 15. 25 is probably on the slow end. (although I’ve never tested a HAMR drive - their head assemblies are probably heavier and more delicate)
Old SCSI 10K drives could hand a huge queue and reach 500 random read IOPS, sounding like a buzzsaw while they did it. Modern capacity drives treat their internals much more gently, and don’t get as much queuing gain. Note also that for larger objects the chunk size is probably 1+ rotations to amortize the seek overhead.
When I was reviewing it for publication I ran a couple of tests and found more like 18 on the devices I tested, but I’m sure there are some that do 15. 25 is probably on the slow end. (although I’ve never tested a HAMR drive - their head assemblies are probably heavier and more delicate)
Old SCSI 10K drives could hand a huge queue and reach 500 random read IOPS, sounding like a buzzsaw while they did it. Modern capacity drives treat their internals much more gently, and don’t get as much queuing gain. Note also that for larger objects the chunk size is probably 1+ rotations to amortize the seek overhead.