It depends on the make and model of the Hard Drive. Normally the spin speed does control how fast you can access a certain part of a track, but it also depends on how fast your seek time it. If you have poor seek time, your rotation speed doesnt mean anything.
Large drive pulley, small driven pulley = faster rotation but less torque. Small drive pulley, large driven pulley = slower rotation but more torque.
It will depend on the drive you are using to burn the disc. A "faster" disc will only be as fast as the drive can burn the files and even then it will fluctuate so it really is not that important.
Because the faster your traveling the more momentum you have
Either works, but it really depends on where you're going.
With a chain drive the driven wheel will always rotate in the same direction as the drive wheel, but in a gear drive the direction of rotation will change between drive wheel and driven wheel.
Driver Drive Faster was created in 2008.
idk really but you got to go to china to find out and if you wanna get to china faster drive by car
PIV drive usually has a hydraulic input, so as the beam diameter increases due to yarn wrapping, it slows the speed of the beam rotation. Since PIV is expensive and breaks all the time, people are replacing it with AC drive resulting in faster yield.
The drive performs better if it spins faster.
set the faster drive to master jumper settings only if it has a working OS on it if not then it wont matter. just remember whichever drive you're using to boot your OS from is the one you have set on master and the second drive should be set to slave jumper settings.
You can access data faster.
Faster than you can run, but not faster than you can drive a car.