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Corsair taps SandForce for Force SSDs

Corsair taps SandForce for Force SSDs

Corsair today announced their upcoming Force series of SSDs, which relies upon a SandForce SF-1200 NAND controller to achieve performance unmatched by any other SSD in their lineup.

“The Force Series are the fastest SSDs that Corsair has launched to date,” stated Kevin Conley, VP of Engineering at Corsair. “We have been very impressed with the SandForce SSD Processor innovations in the months that we have been working with them, and we can’t wait to get these extraordinarily fast SSDs into the hands of our most demanding customers.”

Starting with performance, Corsair’s Force-series SSDs command an impressive peak read and write performance of 285MBps and 275MBps, respectively. Force disks are also well-appointed, featuring support for ATA TRIM, convenient brackets for installation in a standard 3.5″ hard disk bay and an MTBF of one million hours.

“The SandForce SF-1200 SSD Processor employs revolutionary flash management technology to create a new class of SSD with unparalleled performance and reliability,” stated Thad Omura, VP of Marketing at SandForce. “We have enjoyed working closely with Corsair to bring this exciting technology to market for Corsair’s large worldwide network of system builders, retailers, and computing enthusiasts.”

Corsair Force SSDs will soon ship in 100GB (CSSD-F100GB2-BRKT) and 200GB (CSSD-F200GB2-BRKT) capacities for an undisclosed sum.

Comments

  1. Ryder
    Ryder Me too!! Me too!!
  2. Cliff_Forster
    Cliff_Forster I just had my Corsair Force 90 GB arrive from Newegg. Got it on a nice discount.

    So, anyway, I'm new to the world of SSD. I'm going to set up as a boot drive with programs except for Steam, and my user folder.

    Any suggestions on set up? I know there is a kind of a SSD for dummies thread somewhere on Icrontic, but I can't seem to place my finger on it?
  3. mertesn
    mertesn Are there specific questions you'd like answered? As far as basics for Win7 it's really this simple:
    1. Install Windows
    2. ...
    3. Profit!
  4. Cliff_Forster
    Cliff_Forster How should I set up the user folder so its on the spindle drive? Is it as simple as dragging it? Any optimizations I should consider? I'm going to use the SSD for boot and all my programs except for my Steam installation and games. The user folder will also have to sit off SSD too, its too large at about 75 GB.
  5. ardichoke
    ardichoke Moving the user folder is a tricky process (sort of). This is how I did it on my laptop:

    1) Create dummy account w/ administrative permissions
    2) Reboot computer
    3) Log in as dummy admin account
    4) Move your real account's User folder to the drive you want it to reside on
    5) Create a junction point from the old location to the new one
    6) Make sure ownership and permissions are correct on the new location
    7) Reboot (for good measure) and log in as your real account
    8) Once you've verified that everything is working, you can remove the dummy admin account.
  6. Cliff_Forster
    Cliff_Forster For all that trouble, I might just create custom music and picture folders and direct my favorite programs to import and save from those, and just keep a default nearly empty user folder.
  7. Ryder
    Ryder I moved the My documents folder by just renaming the path to the My documents folder.

    10 seconds and done.
  8. ardichoke
    ardichoke
    RyderOCZ wrote:
    I moved the My documents folder by just renaming the path to the My documents folder.

    10 seconds and done.

    He's asking about moving the entire user folder though (from how I read it anyway), not just My Documents.

    It's really not that big of a hassle Cliff, it took me maybe 30 minutes to complete on my lappy (I still have no idea why MSI decided to partition this drive into two partitions, but meh, they did). Since then, everything has worked fine. Plus, now if I ever have to reinstall Windows, I'll just need to re-create the junction point and my whole profile will be preserved.
  9. Thrax
    Thrax (Use the mklink command to symlink the user profile to another drive, then move the contents to the other drive in Linux).
  10. ardichoke
    ardichoke
    Thrax wrote:
    (Use the mklink command to symlink the user profile to another drive, then move the contents to the other drive in Linux).

    This is essentially the same thing I told him to do.
  11. Cliff_Forster
    Cliff_Forster After all of that hard work you kind gentlemen did, I will probably opt for Ryder's solution just moving the documents folder.

    I can't wait to unlock my hardwares I/O potential. Wish I could RAID 0 a few of these, but the budget dictates just a boot and program drive for today.

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