- sata-150 vs sata-300
- Posted by UseNet on June 29th, 2007
My motherboard specs say it is sata-150. does that mean it cant use a
sata-300 disk? whats the diff, other than the 150 integers.
Cr
- Posted by Yes Baby on June 29th, 2007
"UseNet" <Cal@obded.org> wrote in message
news:tKchi.491$eY.25@newssvr13.news.prodigy.net...
you can use 300 but it will run at 150
- Posted by paulmd@efn.org on June 29th, 2007
On Jun 29, 12:06 pm, "UseNet" <C...@obded.org> wrote:
Speed of the interface. You can use the 300 on a 150 interface.
- Posted by DaveW on June 29th, 2007
The SATA-300 can theoretically transfer data twice as fast.
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DaveW
"UseNet" <Cal@obded.org> wrote in message
news:tKchi.491$eY.25@newssvr13.news.prodigy.net...
- Posted by Dean G. on June 30th, 2007
On Jun 29, 6:31 pm, "DaveW" <noth...@bot.org> wrote:
With emphasis on "theoretically", as most drives cannot even begin to
approach the speed of the 150 interface. Of course the maximum "burst"
speed may (or may not) benefit, but that is essentially limited to
data in the on-drive cache. Even many SSD disks have sustained
transfer rates below the SATA-150 limit.
Dean G.
- Posted by Cal Vanize on June 30th, 2007
Dean G. wrote:
The fastest drives can't even sustain half that speed of a SATA150
interface. The drive cache is really most effective on writes much more
than read.
- Posted by kony on June 30th, 2007
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 16:04:04 -0700, "Dean G."
<dguttadauro@4ecp.com> wrote:
The typical SSD runs in what is essentially ATA66 mode. The
crude low-end junk SSDs run somewhere between PIO mode and
ATA66. That means a range of max, peak throughput between
6-66MB/s.
- Posted by Manny on June 30th, 2007
UseNet wrote:
There's a fair chance a SATA2 harddrive will not work on a SATA controller
until it's jumpered properly.
http://tinyurl.com/2ra47o
With most versions of Windows, Enterprise Server 2003 for example, you will
still need to press F6 during setup and insert a floppy containing the SATA
controller driver. Another option is to slipstream these drivers.
- Posted by Cal Vanize on June 30th, 2007
Manny wrote:
Maybe. I haven't had to do that in a long time with either XP or Win2K.
- Posted by GT on July 2nd, 2007
"UseNet" <Cal@obded.org> wrote in message
news:tKchi.491$eY.25@newssvr13.news.prodigy.net...
Think of the first one as a 2 lane motorway, but your drive only needs one
lane. the second one is a 4 lane motorway, but your drive still only needs
one lane!
spec is the maximum speed of the bus, most drives can transfer at 60-70.