This is a good question and I invite someone to provide experimental data. I do not have access to chemistry searching tools so it is difficult to find a good answer. Some of the answers I have found would suggest 3-pentanol should be the greater product, though I cannot estimate the magnitude.
Chlorosulfonation is 80/20 2-pentenesulfonic acid to 3- (
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja01170a022)
Addition of HBr is excess of 3-bromo (
University Chemistry, Volume 1, Murthy)
This second reference cites competing theories of inductive vs hyperconjugation (my interest).
I would believe that 3-pentanol would be the major product. I further suspect the ratio of the addition to be subject to rate by which the carbocation intermediate is trapped. A rapid quench would reduce the selectivity and give more equal ratios. I would suggest this is a factor in the addition/rearrangement of 3-methyl-2-butene with HCl. I think the tertiary carbocation should be sufficiently more stable to give a similar ratio as the addition to 2-methyl-2-butene. However, if chloride traps the intermediate secondary carbocation, possible rearrangement to the tertiary carbocation is stopped. I think that is the reason the chlorosulfonation reaction was more selective. The elimination of a proton should occur much more slowly and more likely to capture the more stable carbocation intermediate.
I am not suggesting there should be a
great difference in the ratio and stability. I think there is a difference, but it may be difficult to infer from experimental data.