FoxSTI 0 Posted November 22, 2018 Happy holiday guys, I have had to replace drives on PCs and laptops I have bought in the past to a 7200rpm drive since they shipped with a 5200rpm slower drives As such perhaps I have the misconception that a 7200rpm drive would be much faster than the later and offer a performance boost. I'm thinking of installing WD purple drives on my NAS based NVR and configure it as a volume dedicated to NVR funtions. I see that WD-P offer different cache amounts which is good. I am going to be recording 7 days 24/7 5-6 cameras. (different MP due to different needs). One think I like to do is playback / stream video so I can't help to think that I should buy the faster drive I can afford even if that means a 10TB WD101PUR since it is 7200rpm. I don't want fall a victim of the "more is better", so I would appreciate some insight from folks who have first hand experience with these drives. The distilled question here is: Does 7200 offer a real advantage in performance to 5200 ? Thank you Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ozcctv 0 Posted November 28, 2018 I am new to CCTV but not new to computers and electronics. I think it would make difference for systems with large number of cameras recoding continuously. I think for systems with 8 cameras not recording continuously, which should be your goal as you want footage going back as far as possible, it will make no difference. I would rather get bigger HD than smaller spinning faster. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jeromephone 6 Posted November 28, 2018 look at the mfgs websites and get a drive designed specifically for video. Really anything will sork but you want something that is designed for your specific needs. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FoxSTI 0 Posted November 28, 2018 Thanks folks. I ended up ordering a WD purple 10TB 7200 rpm. I want to record 24/7 - which in my mind is the best so that you can get the entire story should something happen. I was pricey, but you can't have too much space in an NVR from what I have experienced. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites