Does a Solid State Hard Drive Speeds up a Computer?

I would like to speed up my computer. I’ve read that a solid state hard drive or SSD - Solid State Disk, can really give a boost. So suppose the Solid State Hard Drive (SSD) is really fast (because of the reduced access times and because there are no rotating parts). How much faster will my computer be when I will have a SSD hard drive replacement?

solid state hard drive

A Solid State Hard Drive makes a computer very fast - but only when starting and when reading the data. When writing the data SSD hard drive is faster but not as fast as everyone thinks. A SSD hard drive is about 4,000 times faster on some reads but only less than 20 times faster on some writes.  It's all relative though as based on those figures alone, an SSD drive would appear much faster than a conventional hard disk. This sentence is unfortunately only half-true. Why? I'll explain the same.

A Solid State Hard Drive stores the information on fast NAND flash memory chips. As you have probably noticed, there are no rotating disks on which data is stored. In the Conventional disks must rotate the discs but from the moment the computer is turned on. However, the read heads on the right, positions are taken until they find the information. This takes time and it produces a little noise.

With an SSD hard drive, there is no noise. You can compare it with the storage files on a USB flash drive. The access times on the fast NAND memory Flash are actually much faster than normal hard drives. The access time of a 160 GB Solid State Hard Drive Intel SSD at a price of about € 320 at Amazon is 65 microseconds. This is extremely fast. (A magnetic-based hard drive does microseconds 4000th)

A solid state hard drive is fast if it is new, if used, it becomes slower. But this is case to case.

The SSD drives are very fast at reading. The data is transmitted to the computer even with a top speed of 500 Mbytes/sec. Another adverse property it still has some new solid state hard drive which is much faster than if it is needed. The reason is that a new SSD has released all write blocks. If sectors are increasingly occupied with data, reformat the hard drive around this for now. This will cost time.
solid state hard drive