Power consumption: SSD vs HDD
In questions like this one and in websites everywhere it's noted that SSDs use much less power than HDDs... usually citing ~2 W vs ~6 W for HDDs, my question (and sorry if its stupid just need to be exact) is that per hour? Need to calculate costs savings in power consumption if we switched all our workstations to SSDs
hard-drive ssd power
add a comment |
In questions like this one and in websites everywhere it's noted that SSDs use much less power than HDDs... usually citing ~2 W vs ~6 W for HDDs, my question (and sorry if its stupid just need to be exact) is that per hour? Need to calculate costs savings in power consumption if we switched all our workstations to SSDs
hard-drive ssd power
add a comment |
In questions like this one and in websites everywhere it's noted that SSDs use much less power than HDDs... usually citing ~2 W vs ~6 W for HDDs, my question (and sorry if its stupid just need to be exact) is that per hour? Need to calculate costs savings in power consumption if we switched all our workstations to SSDs
hard-drive ssd power
In questions like this one and in websites everywhere it's noted that SSDs use much less power than HDDs... usually citing ~2 W vs ~6 W for HDDs, my question (and sorry if its stupid just need to be exact) is that per hour? Need to calculate costs savings in power consumption if we switched all our workstations to SSDs
hard-drive ssd power
hard-drive ssd power
edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17
Community♦
1
1
asked Apr 30 '13 at 15:18
Hershizer33Hershizer33
245249
245249
add a comment |
add a comment |
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
If your drive consumes 2 Watts for 1 hour it would have consumed 2 Watt-hours of energy.
A Watt is merely a measure of power use. It's derived by multiplying voltage and current draw. A drive that runs at 12 V and draws 100 mA of current would consume 1.2 Watts of power.
To restate - if you ran that drive for an hour, you'd consume 1.2 Watt-hours of power.
In your case, 2 Watts vs 6 Watts, your cost would be 1/3 for an SSD vs HD. Calculations of time are unnecessary.
9
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
6
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
add a comment |
TLDR: Its not a cost-effective way to reduce your energy use, except on a laptop.
One watt is equal to one joule (a unit of energy) per second. Watts measure the rate of energy transfer (power). You're billed, most likely, by amount of energy consumed, probably in kilowatt-hours (kWh). That's equal to 1000 watts used for one hour (hence the name).
You don't actually need to figure that out yourself, Google will do the math for you. (That's 1 watt, used constantly, for one year—24x7. You can multiply by "(40 hours/week)", etc. as needed, Google calculator is pretty good at this kind of stuff.)
Now, the next problem you'll face is that neither HDD nor SSD are constant-power devices. Both use more power when actually reading or writing than when sitting idle. And hard disks that are idle for a bit will spin down, and use almost no power. Further, SSDs are generally faster, so faced with the many workloads, will get back to idle sooner than HDDs. So you'd really have to measure to get a good number, as Brad Patton says.
But, as an upper limit, let's take that 6W figure, and ask how much it actually costs to use it 40 hours per week, all year—assume that a SSD uses no power. Google gives 13 kWh. Even if you're paying a fairly high rate, say 30¢/kWh, that's under $4/yr. At over $100/SSD, even with a 0% discount rate, the payback period well exceeds the lifespan of the SSD.
It's different on laptops. For example, my laptop for example runs on about 6.5W total. So saving even a fraction of a watt increases battery life noticeably.
add a comment |
You state 2w vs 6w SSD and HDD, that's peak power useage, if you are reading web pages, the SSD will be idle alot of the time, whereas the HDD will spin. The SSD longevity is 1/4 longer than average HDD i've read, which relats to transport and production energy, and it uses less raw materials.
At 50% idle time, the comparison is 1w vs 6w.
for a laptop of 20 watts with 3 hours of battery, you would have 1/5th more battery life. it's about 30 minutes extra.
add a comment |
To calculate cost savings you should really get a Kill-a-watt type device and measure the workstation for a day or more with a HD and with a SSD. Since usage will vary quite a bit over time and that will be the best representation of the actual savings. Also this completely ignores the incredible performance benefits of SSD drives.
See Jeff Atwood's blog post Why Estimate when you can measure for more information.
add a comment |
E=PT (Energy = Power * Time ) so see what Power is. It's Energy over Time.
P=IV (Power = Current * Voltage) FYI in case you need to calculate.
Using E=PT (which shows nicely what power is)
Power(Watts) = E/T = Energy(Joules) / Time(Seconds)
Power(Watts) is Joules per second.
There is such a thing as a watt hour and a kilowatt hour.
a watt hour is a unit of Energy, an alternative to Joules. Not a unit of power. It's how much Energy that is one watt(joule per second) over an hour. One watt hour is 3600 Joules. So, it's a bigger unit.
If you included in your post, the electricity cost, then somebody might be able to tell you. Otherwise perhaps somebody can tell you an electricity cost to use as an example
I suppose you could get an energy monitor and plug a drive in so it gets its power from the wall/mains socket. Or just use the rated power that the hard drive shows you. Then find out what the rate of charge is for electricity.
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
add a comment |
Remember most people have multiple HDD their comps. I myself had 4 until I bought 2 m.2 drives.
So 4 HDD at max would be 24 watts (each pair in RAID configuration)
Also that is 2 mW for the ssd. (M.2 anyways) not watts, milliwatts
3
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
add a comment |
I was curious about this today so I ran some numbers based on current technology.
I looked at the spec for two Western Digital drives (one HDD and one SSD).
They state an average of 9.1W for the HDD and 0.06W for the SSD (60mW). At the current prices in my locale, it works out that the HDD costs about 62 cents per month and the SSD costs 0.4 cents per month to operate. The SSD saves $7.40 per year in electric costs if left on with load 24/7, but if power management is used, it would likely be more like $2.
The math:
9.47¢/kWh=0.00947¢/Wh
30 days (for simplicity) *24 hours per day = 720 hours/mo
9.10W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=62.04744 cents/mo
0.06W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=0.409104 cents/mo
Editorial
The biggest issue in recouping the costs are the price difference; if you can get away with the smallest SSD (lets say 120GB), the current smallest HDDs are about the same price (25$), but are 500GB. But a 120GB is simply not sufficient for anything but basic usage. For simplicity, the cheapest 250GB SSD is about 35$ and 480GB is about 65$ which would take about 1.35 years and 5.4 years to break even on energy cost + initial cost if the drives are in constant use 24/7 (which would be rare in workplace client machines).
So, ignoring that SSDs increase user productivity, it would make sense to buy 250GB SSD over 500GB HDD since it would save you a little bit of electrical costs. 480GB SSDs would likely never recoup the price difference based on energy alone because of normal machine replacement cycles. But to me, the price of SSDs for client computers are easily offset by increased productivity (quicker boot, less waiting on documents to load, etc).
add a comment |
looking into this it seems that on many old laptops the CPU seems to work harder but this is because it can access so much faster than with an HDD. So data is hence processed faster overall but for something like playing a DVD it makes very little difference.
I did notice that with some drives the OS used is significant such as windows 7/10 versus Linux as some support advanced features like drive sleep mode. Playing films from RAM (cough 8GB /cough) is going to use a lot less power than from the drive.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "3"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f589709%2fpower-consumption-ssd-vs-hdd%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
If your drive consumes 2 Watts for 1 hour it would have consumed 2 Watt-hours of energy.
A Watt is merely a measure of power use. It's derived by multiplying voltage and current draw. A drive that runs at 12 V and draws 100 mA of current would consume 1.2 Watts of power.
To restate - if you ran that drive for an hour, you'd consume 1.2 Watt-hours of power.
In your case, 2 Watts vs 6 Watts, your cost would be 1/3 for an SSD vs HD. Calculations of time are unnecessary.
9
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
6
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
add a comment |
If your drive consumes 2 Watts for 1 hour it would have consumed 2 Watt-hours of energy.
A Watt is merely a measure of power use. It's derived by multiplying voltage and current draw. A drive that runs at 12 V and draws 100 mA of current would consume 1.2 Watts of power.
To restate - if you ran that drive for an hour, you'd consume 1.2 Watt-hours of power.
In your case, 2 Watts vs 6 Watts, your cost would be 1/3 for an SSD vs HD. Calculations of time are unnecessary.
9
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
6
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
add a comment |
If your drive consumes 2 Watts for 1 hour it would have consumed 2 Watt-hours of energy.
A Watt is merely a measure of power use. It's derived by multiplying voltage and current draw. A drive that runs at 12 V and draws 100 mA of current would consume 1.2 Watts of power.
To restate - if you ran that drive for an hour, you'd consume 1.2 Watt-hours of power.
In your case, 2 Watts vs 6 Watts, your cost would be 1/3 for an SSD vs HD. Calculations of time are unnecessary.
If your drive consumes 2 Watts for 1 hour it would have consumed 2 Watt-hours of energy.
A Watt is merely a measure of power use. It's derived by multiplying voltage and current draw. A drive that runs at 12 V and draws 100 mA of current would consume 1.2 Watts of power.
To restate - if you ran that drive for an hour, you'd consume 1.2 Watt-hours of power.
In your case, 2 Watts vs 6 Watts, your cost would be 1/3 for an SSD vs HD. Calculations of time are unnecessary.
edited May 7 '13 at 16:12
answered Apr 30 '13 at 15:26
BobTBobT
63059
63059
9
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
6
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
add a comment |
9
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
6
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
9
9
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
Technically, power is the rate at which energy is transfered. A watt-hour is a measurement of energy: the amount of energy used in an hour at the rate of one watt is one watt-hour. Also note that many computer parts are labeled with the maximum power they may draw; actual power usage may be less at most times.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:42
6
6
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
Also, keep in mind that residential electricity is usually billed in kilowatt hours. Using 6 watts for 24 hours/day, 365 days/year will be about 52.5kWH. At my power company's current residential rates, that's about $4, so an SSD isn't going to pay for itself in energy costs anytime soon.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 16:54
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@depquid, right, but for laptops on batteries with ~50Wh capacity a 4 watt difference in power consumption may be quite a significant factor.
– ulidtko
Apr 30 '13 at 20:50
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
@ulidtko Yes, but the OP was about power cost savings, not battery depletion. I just realized that it says, "all our workstations," which implies a business environment. Since electricity for businesses may be billed for both power (demand) and energy used, and many rate plans are available, calculating business electricity costs for HDDs vs. SSDs is going to be much more complicated.
– depquid
Apr 30 '13 at 21:36
add a comment |
TLDR: Its not a cost-effective way to reduce your energy use, except on a laptop.
One watt is equal to one joule (a unit of energy) per second. Watts measure the rate of energy transfer (power). You're billed, most likely, by amount of energy consumed, probably in kilowatt-hours (kWh). That's equal to 1000 watts used for one hour (hence the name).
You don't actually need to figure that out yourself, Google will do the math for you. (That's 1 watt, used constantly, for one year—24x7. You can multiply by "(40 hours/week)", etc. as needed, Google calculator is pretty good at this kind of stuff.)
Now, the next problem you'll face is that neither HDD nor SSD are constant-power devices. Both use more power when actually reading or writing than when sitting idle. And hard disks that are idle for a bit will spin down, and use almost no power. Further, SSDs are generally faster, so faced with the many workloads, will get back to idle sooner than HDDs. So you'd really have to measure to get a good number, as Brad Patton says.
But, as an upper limit, let's take that 6W figure, and ask how much it actually costs to use it 40 hours per week, all year—assume that a SSD uses no power. Google gives 13 kWh. Even if you're paying a fairly high rate, say 30¢/kWh, that's under $4/yr. At over $100/SSD, even with a 0% discount rate, the payback period well exceeds the lifespan of the SSD.
It's different on laptops. For example, my laptop for example runs on about 6.5W total. So saving even a fraction of a watt increases battery life noticeably.
add a comment |
TLDR: Its not a cost-effective way to reduce your energy use, except on a laptop.
One watt is equal to one joule (a unit of energy) per second. Watts measure the rate of energy transfer (power). You're billed, most likely, by amount of energy consumed, probably in kilowatt-hours (kWh). That's equal to 1000 watts used for one hour (hence the name).
You don't actually need to figure that out yourself, Google will do the math for you. (That's 1 watt, used constantly, for one year—24x7. You can multiply by "(40 hours/week)", etc. as needed, Google calculator is pretty good at this kind of stuff.)
Now, the next problem you'll face is that neither HDD nor SSD are constant-power devices. Both use more power when actually reading or writing than when sitting idle. And hard disks that are idle for a bit will spin down, and use almost no power. Further, SSDs are generally faster, so faced with the many workloads, will get back to idle sooner than HDDs. So you'd really have to measure to get a good number, as Brad Patton says.
But, as an upper limit, let's take that 6W figure, and ask how much it actually costs to use it 40 hours per week, all year—assume that a SSD uses no power. Google gives 13 kWh. Even if you're paying a fairly high rate, say 30¢/kWh, that's under $4/yr. At over $100/SSD, even with a 0% discount rate, the payback period well exceeds the lifespan of the SSD.
It's different on laptops. For example, my laptop for example runs on about 6.5W total. So saving even a fraction of a watt increases battery life noticeably.
add a comment |
TLDR: Its not a cost-effective way to reduce your energy use, except on a laptop.
One watt is equal to one joule (a unit of energy) per second. Watts measure the rate of energy transfer (power). You're billed, most likely, by amount of energy consumed, probably in kilowatt-hours (kWh). That's equal to 1000 watts used for one hour (hence the name).
You don't actually need to figure that out yourself, Google will do the math for you. (That's 1 watt, used constantly, for one year—24x7. You can multiply by "(40 hours/week)", etc. as needed, Google calculator is pretty good at this kind of stuff.)
Now, the next problem you'll face is that neither HDD nor SSD are constant-power devices. Both use more power when actually reading or writing than when sitting idle. And hard disks that are idle for a bit will spin down, and use almost no power. Further, SSDs are generally faster, so faced with the many workloads, will get back to idle sooner than HDDs. So you'd really have to measure to get a good number, as Brad Patton says.
But, as an upper limit, let's take that 6W figure, and ask how much it actually costs to use it 40 hours per week, all year—assume that a SSD uses no power. Google gives 13 kWh. Even if you're paying a fairly high rate, say 30¢/kWh, that's under $4/yr. At over $100/SSD, even with a 0% discount rate, the payback period well exceeds the lifespan of the SSD.
It's different on laptops. For example, my laptop for example runs on about 6.5W total. So saving even a fraction of a watt increases battery life noticeably.
TLDR: Its not a cost-effective way to reduce your energy use, except on a laptop.
One watt is equal to one joule (a unit of energy) per second. Watts measure the rate of energy transfer (power). You're billed, most likely, by amount of energy consumed, probably in kilowatt-hours (kWh). That's equal to 1000 watts used for one hour (hence the name).
You don't actually need to figure that out yourself, Google will do the math for you. (That's 1 watt, used constantly, for one year—24x7. You can multiply by "(40 hours/week)", etc. as needed, Google calculator is pretty good at this kind of stuff.)
Now, the next problem you'll face is that neither HDD nor SSD are constant-power devices. Both use more power when actually reading or writing than when sitting idle. And hard disks that are idle for a bit will spin down, and use almost no power. Further, SSDs are generally faster, so faced with the many workloads, will get back to idle sooner than HDDs. So you'd really have to measure to get a good number, as Brad Patton says.
But, as an upper limit, let's take that 6W figure, and ask how much it actually costs to use it 40 hours per week, all year—assume that a SSD uses no power. Google gives 13 kWh. Even if you're paying a fairly high rate, say 30¢/kWh, that's under $4/yr. At over $100/SSD, even with a 0% discount rate, the payback period well exceeds the lifespan of the SSD.
It's different on laptops. For example, my laptop for example runs on about 6.5W total. So saving even a fraction of a watt increases battery life noticeably.
answered May 1 '13 at 22:21
derobertderobert
3,0261718
3,0261718
add a comment |
add a comment |
You state 2w vs 6w SSD and HDD, that's peak power useage, if you are reading web pages, the SSD will be idle alot of the time, whereas the HDD will spin. The SSD longevity is 1/4 longer than average HDD i've read, which relats to transport and production energy, and it uses less raw materials.
At 50% idle time, the comparison is 1w vs 6w.
for a laptop of 20 watts with 3 hours of battery, you would have 1/5th more battery life. it's about 30 minutes extra.
add a comment |
You state 2w vs 6w SSD and HDD, that's peak power useage, if you are reading web pages, the SSD will be idle alot of the time, whereas the HDD will spin. The SSD longevity is 1/4 longer than average HDD i've read, which relats to transport and production energy, and it uses less raw materials.
At 50% idle time, the comparison is 1w vs 6w.
for a laptop of 20 watts with 3 hours of battery, you would have 1/5th more battery life. it's about 30 minutes extra.
add a comment |
You state 2w vs 6w SSD and HDD, that's peak power useage, if you are reading web pages, the SSD will be idle alot of the time, whereas the HDD will spin. The SSD longevity is 1/4 longer than average HDD i've read, which relats to transport and production energy, and it uses less raw materials.
At 50% idle time, the comparison is 1w vs 6w.
for a laptop of 20 watts with 3 hours of battery, you would have 1/5th more battery life. it's about 30 minutes extra.
You state 2w vs 6w SSD and HDD, that's peak power useage, if you are reading web pages, the SSD will be idle alot of the time, whereas the HDD will spin. The SSD longevity is 1/4 longer than average HDD i've read, which relats to transport and production energy, and it uses less raw materials.
At 50% idle time, the comparison is 1w vs 6w.
for a laptop of 20 watts with 3 hours of battery, you would have 1/5th more battery life. it's about 30 minutes extra.
edited Apr 9 '17 at 3:27
Gypsy Spellweaver
1,5581621
1,5581621
answered May 5 '14 at 7:53
com.prehensiblecom.prehensible
176110
176110
add a comment |
add a comment |
To calculate cost savings you should really get a Kill-a-watt type device and measure the workstation for a day or more with a HD and with a SSD. Since usage will vary quite a bit over time and that will be the best representation of the actual savings. Also this completely ignores the incredible performance benefits of SSD drives.
See Jeff Atwood's blog post Why Estimate when you can measure for more information.
add a comment |
To calculate cost savings you should really get a Kill-a-watt type device and measure the workstation for a day or more with a HD and with a SSD. Since usage will vary quite a bit over time and that will be the best representation of the actual savings. Also this completely ignores the incredible performance benefits of SSD drives.
See Jeff Atwood's blog post Why Estimate when you can measure for more information.
add a comment |
To calculate cost savings you should really get a Kill-a-watt type device and measure the workstation for a day or more with a HD and with a SSD. Since usage will vary quite a bit over time and that will be the best representation of the actual savings. Also this completely ignores the incredible performance benefits of SSD drives.
See Jeff Atwood's blog post Why Estimate when you can measure for more information.
To calculate cost savings you should really get a Kill-a-watt type device and measure the workstation for a day or more with a HD and with a SSD. Since usage will vary quite a bit over time and that will be the best representation of the actual savings. Also this completely ignores the incredible performance benefits of SSD drives.
See Jeff Atwood's blog post Why Estimate when you can measure for more information.
edited Apr 30 '13 at 15:38
answered Apr 30 '13 at 15:28
Brad PattonBrad Patton
9,151123366
9,151123366
add a comment |
add a comment |
E=PT (Energy = Power * Time ) so see what Power is. It's Energy over Time.
P=IV (Power = Current * Voltage) FYI in case you need to calculate.
Using E=PT (which shows nicely what power is)
Power(Watts) = E/T = Energy(Joules) / Time(Seconds)
Power(Watts) is Joules per second.
There is such a thing as a watt hour and a kilowatt hour.
a watt hour is a unit of Energy, an alternative to Joules. Not a unit of power. It's how much Energy that is one watt(joule per second) over an hour. One watt hour is 3600 Joules. So, it's a bigger unit.
If you included in your post, the electricity cost, then somebody might be able to tell you. Otherwise perhaps somebody can tell you an electricity cost to use as an example
I suppose you could get an energy monitor and plug a drive in so it gets its power from the wall/mains socket. Or just use the rated power that the hard drive shows you. Then find out what the rate of charge is for electricity.
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
add a comment |
E=PT (Energy = Power * Time ) so see what Power is. It's Energy over Time.
P=IV (Power = Current * Voltage) FYI in case you need to calculate.
Using E=PT (which shows nicely what power is)
Power(Watts) = E/T = Energy(Joules) / Time(Seconds)
Power(Watts) is Joules per second.
There is such a thing as a watt hour and a kilowatt hour.
a watt hour is a unit of Energy, an alternative to Joules. Not a unit of power. It's how much Energy that is one watt(joule per second) over an hour. One watt hour is 3600 Joules. So, it's a bigger unit.
If you included in your post, the electricity cost, then somebody might be able to tell you. Otherwise perhaps somebody can tell you an electricity cost to use as an example
I suppose you could get an energy monitor and plug a drive in so it gets its power from the wall/mains socket. Or just use the rated power that the hard drive shows you. Then find out what the rate of charge is for electricity.
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
add a comment |
E=PT (Energy = Power * Time ) so see what Power is. It's Energy over Time.
P=IV (Power = Current * Voltage) FYI in case you need to calculate.
Using E=PT (which shows nicely what power is)
Power(Watts) = E/T = Energy(Joules) / Time(Seconds)
Power(Watts) is Joules per second.
There is such a thing as a watt hour and a kilowatt hour.
a watt hour is a unit of Energy, an alternative to Joules. Not a unit of power. It's how much Energy that is one watt(joule per second) over an hour. One watt hour is 3600 Joules. So, it's a bigger unit.
If you included in your post, the electricity cost, then somebody might be able to tell you. Otherwise perhaps somebody can tell you an electricity cost to use as an example
I suppose you could get an energy monitor and plug a drive in so it gets its power from the wall/mains socket. Or just use the rated power that the hard drive shows you. Then find out what the rate of charge is for electricity.
E=PT (Energy = Power * Time ) so see what Power is. It's Energy over Time.
P=IV (Power = Current * Voltage) FYI in case you need to calculate.
Using E=PT (which shows nicely what power is)
Power(Watts) = E/T = Energy(Joules) / Time(Seconds)
Power(Watts) is Joules per second.
There is such a thing as a watt hour and a kilowatt hour.
a watt hour is a unit of Energy, an alternative to Joules. Not a unit of power. It's how much Energy that is one watt(joule per second) over an hour. One watt hour is 3600 Joules. So, it's a bigger unit.
If you included in your post, the electricity cost, then somebody might be able to tell you. Otherwise perhaps somebody can tell you an electricity cost to use as an example
I suppose you could get an energy monitor and plug a drive in so it gets its power from the wall/mains socket. Or just use the rated power that the hard drive shows you. Then find out what the rate of charge is for electricity.
answered May 6 '13 at 22:34
barlopbarlop
15.4k2287145
15.4k2287145
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
add a comment |
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
Any why to measure SSD consumption onboard, i.e. in the workstation?
– Suncatcher
Apr 8 '18 at 15:00
add a comment |
Remember most people have multiple HDD their comps. I myself had 4 until I bought 2 m.2 drives.
So 4 HDD at max would be 24 watts (each pair in RAID configuration)
Also that is 2 mW for the ssd. (M.2 anyways) not watts, milliwatts
3
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
add a comment |
Remember most people have multiple HDD their comps. I myself had 4 until I bought 2 m.2 drives.
So 4 HDD at max would be 24 watts (each pair in RAID configuration)
Also that is 2 mW for the ssd. (M.2 anyways) not watts, milliwatts
3
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
add a comment |
Remember most people have multiple HDD their comps. I myself had 4 until I bought 2 m.2 drives.
So 4 HDD at max would be 24 watts (each pair in RAID configuration)
Also that is 2 mW for the ssd. (M.2 anyways) not watts, milliwatts
Remember most people have multiple HDD their comps. I myself had 4 until I bought 2 m.2 drives.
So 4 HDD at max would be 24 watts (each pair in RAID configuration)
Also that is 2 mW for the ssd. (M.2 anyways) not watts, milliwatts
answered May 1 '18 at 7:26
BlazeagloryBlazeaglory
1
1
3
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
add a comment |
3
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
3
3
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
2mW is on the order of what a solar-powered calculator uses. I am extremely skeptical that there could be any sort of SSD that would use that little power.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 1 '18 at 7:51
add a comment |
I was curious about this today so I ran some numbers based on current technology.
I looked at the spec for two Western Digital drives (one HDD and one SSD).
They state an average of 9.1W for the HDD and 0.06W for the SSD (60mW). At the current prices in my locale, it works out that the HDD costs about 62 cents per month and the SSD costs 0.4 cents per month to operate. The SSD saves $7.40 per year in electric costs if left on with load 24/7, but if power management is used, it would likely be more like $2.
The math:
9.47¢/kWh=0.00947¢/Wh
30 days (for simplicity) *24 hours per day = 720 hours/mo
9.10W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=62.04744 cents/mo
0.06W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=0.409104 cents/mo
Editorial
The biggest issue in recouping the costs are the price difference; if you can get away with the smallest SSD (lets say 120GB), the current smallest HDDs are about the same price (25$), but are 500GB. But a 120GB is simply not sufficient for anything but basic usage. For simplicity, the cheapest 250GB SSD is about 35$ and 480GB is about 65$ which would take about 1.35 years and 5.4 years to break even on energy cost + initial cost if the drives are in constant use 24/7 (which would be rare in workplace client machines).
So, ignoring that SSDs increase user productivity, it would make sense to buy 250GB SSD over 500GB HDD since it would save you a little bit of electrical costs. 480GB SSDs would likely never recoup the price difference based on energy alone because of normal machine replacement cycles. But to me, the price of SSDs for client computers are easily offset by increased productivity (quicker boot, less waiting on documents to load, etc).
add a comment |
I was curious about this today so I ran some numbers based on current technology.
I looked at the spec for two Western Digital drives (one HDD and one SSD).
They state an average of 9.1W for the HDD and 0.06W for the SSD (60mW). At the current prices in my locale, it works out that the HDD costs about 62 cents per month and the SSD costs 0.4 cents per month to operate. The SSD saves $7.40 per year in electric costs if left on with load 24/7, but if power management is used, it would likely be more like $2.
The math:
9.47¢/kWh=0.00947¢/Wh
30 days (for simplicity) *24 hours per day = 720 hours/mo
9.10W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=62.04744 cents/mo
0.06W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=0.409104 cents/mo
Editorial
The biggest issue in recouping the costs are the price difference; if you can get away with the smallest SSD (lets say 120GB), the current smallest HDDs are about the same price (25$), but are 500GB. But a 120GB is simply not sufficient for anything but basic usage. For simplicity, the cheapest 250GB SSD is about 35$ and 480GB is about 65$ which would take about 1.35 years and 5.4 years to break even on energy cost + initial cost if the drives are in constant use 24/7 (which would be rare in workplace client machines).
So, ignoring that SSDs increase user productivity, it would make sense to buy 250GB SSD over 500GB HDD since it would save you a little bit of electrical costs. 480GB SSDs would likely never recoup the price difference based on energy alone because of normal machine replacement cycles. But to me, the price of SSDs for client computers are easily offset by increased productivity (quicker boot, less waiting on documents to load, etc).
add a comment |
I was curious about this today so I ran some numbers based on current technology.
I looked at the spec for two Western Digital drives (one HDD and one SSD).
They state an average of 9.1W for the HDD and 0.06W for the SSD (60mW). At the current prices in my locale, it works out that the HDD costs about 62 cents per month and the SSD costs 0.4 cents per month to operate. The SSD saves $7.40 per year in electric costs if left on with load 24/7, but if power management is used, it would likely be more like $2.
The math:
9.47¢/kWh=0.00947¢/Wh
30 days (for simplicity) *24 hours per day = 720 hours/mo
9.10W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=62.04744 cents/mo
0.06W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=0.409104 cents/mo
Editorial
The biggest issue in recouping the costs are the price difference; if you can get away with the smallest SSD (lets say 120GB), the current smallest HDDs are about the same price (25$), but are 500GB. But a 120GB is simply not sufficient for anything but basic usage. For simplicity, the cheapest 250GB SSD is about 35$ and 480GB is about 65$ which would take about 1.35 years and 5.4 years to break even on energy cost + initial cost if the drives are in constant use 24/7 (which would be rare in workplace client machines).
So, ignoring that SSDs increase user productivity, it would make sense to buy 250GB SSD over 500GB HDD since it would save you a little bit of electrical costs. 480GB SSDs would likely never recoup the price difference based on energy alone because of normal machine replacement cycles. But to me, the price of SSDs for client computers are easily offset by increased productivity (quicker boot, less waiting on documents to load, etc).
I was curious about this today so I ran some numbers based on current technology.
I looked at the spec for two Western Digital drives (one HDD and one SSD).
They state an average of 9.1W for the HDD and 0.06W for the SSD (60mW). At the current prices in my locale, it works out that the HDD costs about 62 cents per month and the SSD costs 0.4 cents per month to operate. The SSD saves $7.40 per year in electric costs if left on with load 24/7, but if power management is used, it would likely be more like $2.
The math:
9.47¢/kWh=0.00947¢/Wh
30 days (for simplicity) *24 hours per day = 720 hours/mo
9.10W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=62.04744 cents/mo
0.06W*720hr/mo*0.00947¢/Wh=0.409104 cents/mo
Editorial
The biggest issue in recouping the costs are the price difference; if you can get away with the smallest SSD (lets say 120GB), the current smallest HDDs are about the same price (25$), but are 500GB. But a 120GB is simply not sufficient for anything but basic usage. For simplicity, the cheapest 250GB SSD is about 35$ and 480GB is about 65$ which would take about 1.35 years and 5.4 years to break even on energy cost + initial cost if the drives are in constant use 24/7 (which would be rare in workplace client machines).
So, ignoring that SSDs increase user productivity, it would make sense to buy 250GB SSD over 500GB HDD since it would save you a little bit of electrical costs. 480GB SSDs would likely never recoup the price difference based on energy alone because of normal machine replacement cycles. But to me, the price of SSDs for client computers are easily offset by increased productivity (quicker boot, less waiting on documents to load, etc).
edited Nov 30 '18 at 15:36
answered Nov 30 '18 at 15:28
UnhandledExcepSeanUnhandledExcepSean
1013
1013
add a comment |
add a comment |
looking into this it seems that on many old laptops the CPU seems to work harder but this is because it can access so much faster than with an HDD. So data is hence processed faster overall but for something like playing a DVD it makes very little difference.
I did notice that with some drives the OS used is significant such as windows 7/10 versus Linux as some support advanced features like drive sleep mode. Playing films from RAM (cough 8GB /cough) is going to use a lot less power than from the drive.
add a comment |
looking into this it seems that on many old laptops the CPU seems to work harder but this is because it can access so much faster than with an HDD. So data is hence processed faster overall but for something like playing a DVD it makes very little difference.
I did notice that with some drives the OS used is significant such as windows 7/10 versus Linux as some support advanced features like drive sleep mode. Playing films from RAM (cough 8GB /cough) is going to use a lot less power than from the drive.
add a comment |
looking into this it seems that on many old laptops the CPU seems to work harder but this is because it can access so much faster than with an HDD. So data is hence processed faster overall but for something like playing a DVD it makes very little difference.
I did notice that with some drives the OS used is significant such as windows 7/10 versus Linux as some support advanced features like drive sleep mode. Playing films from RAM (cough 8GB /cough) is going to use a lot less power than from the drive.
looking into this it seems that on many old laptops the CPU seems to work harder but this is because it can access so much faster than with an HDD. So data is hence processed faster overall but for something like playing a DVD it makes very little difference.
I did notice that with some drives the OS used is significant such as windows 7/10 versus Linux as some support advanced features like drive sleep mode. Playing films from RAM (cough 8GB /cough) is going to use a lot less power than from the drive.
answered Jan 10 at 9:13
ConundrumConundrum
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f589709%2fpower-consumption-ssd-vs-hdd%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown