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Silly John Fatty

macrumors 68000
Original poster
Nov 6, 2012
1,759
478
I'd like to get the iPhone 13 mini, and my plan was to get the 128 GB model, as I won't need more space than that.

But I remember that higher storage often means better read & write speeds. And that's one thing that is important for me, especially because I plan to keep the device for a long time.

So now I'm wondering if I should get more storage, just because of that? What do you think? Will it be faster?
 

sack_peak

Suspended
Sep 3, 2023
1,020
958
Seeming Apple will never build a mini ever again why not max out storage to future proof?

Make sure that phone is good until year 2034?
 

ctjack

macrumors 65816
Mar 8, 2020
1,371
1,410
It will be faster but not necessarily smth noticeable.

The only pro side of going big if you gonna use 80gb+ on your phone: write speeds take a nose dive from 1250mbs to 239mbps when the memory is full.
 

Silly John Fatty

macrumors 68000
Original poster
Nov 6, 2012
1,759
478
Seeming Apple will never build a mini ever again why not max out storage to future proof?

Make sure that phone is good until year 2034?

That's more dependent on software updates imo, I want to keep up with these. But with larger storage, the phone might swallow these updates easier. I don't want it to become laggy at some point.

I'm also hoping Apple will release a smaller phone in the coming years, so I was hoping this 13 mini would be a temporary solution (okay, every iPhone you buy is one).

It will be faster but not necessarily smth noticeable.

The only pro side of going big if you gonna use 80gb+ on your phone: write speeds take a nose dive from 1250mbs to 239mbps when the memory is full.

I'm not sure I understand what you're saying, could you repeat this? Do you mean that on the 128 GB model, if I used 80 GB, the write speed would go down to 239 mbps?
 

mattopotamus

macrumors G5
Jun 12, 2012
14,671
5,883
You are not going to notice a difference unless you are seriously close to maxing out your storage.
 

ctjack

macrumors 65816
Mar 8, 2020
1,371
1,410
That's more dependent on software updates imo, I want to keep up with these. But with larger storage, the phone might swallow these updates easier. I don't want it to become laggy at some point.

I'm also hoping Apple will release a smaller phone in the coming years, so I was hoping this 13 mini would be a temporary solution (okay, every iPhone you buy is one).



I'm not sure I understand what you're saying, could you repeat this? Do you mean that on the 128 GB model, if I used 80 GB, the write speed would go down to 239 mbps?
If you filled your 128GB up to 110-120GB then yes, your write speed will go down to 239 mbps from 1250mbps.
If you carry 100+ gb then advisable to get the next tier storage.
Otherwise even though 1 TB drive is faster than 128GB, you would not notice any difference in real life if you are not filling them more than 50-80%.

For example: had SE2020 64gb and Iphone 11 128gb both with the same A13 chip and internals.
SE2020 became laggy because i had 60GB on it, while switching to iphone 11 felt much faster - even though the internals are the same but this time it was not full to the brim.
 

snipr125

macrumors 68000
Oct 17, 2015
1,811
2,857
UK
Yes larger storage technically means faster read/write speeds due to parallelism. Basically this means the SSD has more room to move data around in the free part of the SSD if this makes sense.
 
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