Definately
A 7200 RPM hdd spins at 7200 RPM, 10000 RPM spins at (you guessed it) 10000 RPM. A 10000 RPM HDD should transfer data faster than a 7200, and apart from the WD "Raptor" series most 10000 RPM HDDs are high end SCSI (Small Computer System Interface) drives, and as such are built to a higher standard than IDE (Internal Drive Electronics) or SATA (Serial AT Attachment) drives.
That depends, is a a 520 SATA for a notebook or Desktop. Most notebooks have a 5400 RPM, though you can purchase 7200 RPM drives. Desktops are generally 7200, but can go to 10000 RPM. SCSI drives, which 520 isn't usually, can also go to 15000 RPM.
5400 and 7200 RPM's. For all you studying to be 25B's its on page 328 in an orange chart.
The most common range is 5400-7200 rpm. There are also 10000 and 15000 rpm drives. Solid state drives do not operate on the same principals as disk drives, and do not spin at all.
7200 +7200 14400
1.5% of 7200= 1.5% * 7200= 0.015 * 7200= 108
6% of 7200= 6% * 7200= 0.06 * 7200= 432
36% of 7,200 = 36% * 7200 = 0.36 * 7200 = 2,592
There are 90 80s in 7200
19.3097877³ = 7200 ■
7200 ft are in 7200 ft. In inches it`s 86,400
Theres a number of different speedsOlder drives spin at 5400RPMThe average drive spins at 7200RPMNewer, 1TB SATA drives spin at 10,000RPMHight performance drives (File Servers, Web Hosting ec) spin at 15,000RPM