Attention Hitachi SATAII/NCQ owners!
The new drives like the 80GB HDS728080PLA380 have SATA300 disable from factory.
To take full advantage of the drive's speed you must enable it by using Feature Tool (v1.97) otherwise the drive is working as SATA150
DO NOT enable SATA300 if your controller doesn't support it!
Check out the burst rate after re-configuring the drives:
To take full advantage of the drive's speed you must enable it by using Feature Tool (v1.97) otherwise the drive is working as SATA150
DO NOT enable SATA300 if your controller doesn't support it!
Check out the burst rate after re-configuring the drives:
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Comments
(edit) Oops, just saw your sig mentioning the RAID.
About the only useful application of SATA300 I can think of, would be ESATA (external SATA) that some vendors are beginning to push. External storage devices or flash memory systems may be able to better use this bandwidth.
oh and don't forget the price, around $60 for an 80GB drive...
I agree, NCQ and $60.. can't go wrong there
But make no mistake... The drives EQ are talking about are some of... if not THE fastest non raptor SATA drives made today period.
For the money they are absolutely killer!
Tex
Besides giving me the otion of turning on SATA II----there is also an option to turn on "Spread Spectrum Clocking"???
What the heck is that?? ---Another name for NCQ???
Do I need it???
Spread Spectrum on a board is never enabled for overclocking.
Anybody know what this term means on these Hitachi SATA II drives???
John
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First off
the two drivers on the Floppy had to be loaded in the exact sequence as described in the DFI manual----even though the second driver appears at the top when you pop in the floppy and you would naturally load that one first----do it out of sequence and windows doesn't recognize the Array. (had to restart windows load)
2nd----while windows was loading
it kept asking for the Raidmngnt.ini file
well, I found it
it was still on the floppy----so I just kept directing it to the A Drive every time it asked (about 5 times). Very strange----but it now recognizes the striped array (Raid 0) and seems fine. In fact----it seems VERY fast. Faster than ANY array I've ever had. I haven't benched it yet
but "feel" is VERY pleasant. The only thing I can think of is that my floppy was not up to snuff somehow...