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Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance)

SATA vs IDE



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old February 23rd 07, 12:38 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Willie
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Posts: 2
Default SATA vs IDE

I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie

  #2 (permalink)  
Old February 23rd 07, 03:45 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Richard Urban
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,520
Default SATA vs IDE

The operating system should be installed on the fastest hard drive you have
in the computer. Cable the drives so that it is the master drive (on IDE) or
SATA1

--


Regards,

Richard Urban
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
(For email, remove the obvious from my address)

Quote from George Ankner:
If you knew as much as you think you know,
You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew!



"Willie" wrote in message
...
I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie


  #3 (permalink)  
Old February 23rd 07, 09:40 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Richard G. Harper
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Posts: 3,272
Default SATA vs IDE

There is little speed difference between IDE and first generation SATA
drives. The newer SATA drives and controllers with NCQ and improved
throughput are theoretically faster but in reality there is still only a
modest increase in real-world performance. I would not spend extra money to
change from IDE to SATA unless you're simultaneously going to do something
else, say perhaps utilize a RAID function in your SATA controller to
increase speed or data reliability.

--
Richard G. Harper [MVP Shell/User]
* NEW! Catch my blog ...
http://msmvps.com/blogs/rgharper/
* PLEASE post all messages and replies in the newsgroups
* The Website - http://rgharper.mvps.org/
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"Willie" wrote in message
...
I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie



  #4 (permalink)  
Old February 24th 07, 03:34 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Night Keeper
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default SATA vs IDE

If your going to buy a hard drive, I would buy the SATA for the simple fact
that it is the future of hard drives (at this time anyway). I personally
have a 200 gig SATA drive with Vista Home Premium installed on it and 2 IDE
(or PATA) drives for storage: 80 gig & 100 gig. SATA is faster even though
you may not notice it at face value.


"Richard G. Harper" wrote in message
...
There is little speed difference between IDE and first generation SATA
drives. The newer SATA drives and controllers with NCQ and improved
throughput are theoretically faster but in reality there is still only a
modest increase in real-world performance. I would not spend extra money
to change from IDE to SATA unless you're simultaneously going to do
something else, say perhaps utilize a RAID function in your SATA
controller to increase speed or data reliability.

--
Richard G. Harper [MVP Shell/User]
* NEW! Catch my blog ...
http://msmvps.com/blogs/rgharper/
* PLEASE post all messages and replies in the newsgroups
* The Website - http://rgharper.mvps.org/
* HELP us help YOU ... http://www.dts-l.org/goodpost.htm


"Willie" wrote in message
...
I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie




  #5 (permalink)  
Old February 24th 07, 06:23 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
pete
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 142
Default SATA vs IDE

Can your mobo support SATA??
peter
"Willie" wrote in message
...
I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie


  #6 (permalink)  
Old February 28th 07, 09:27 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Will
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 60
Default SATA vs IDE


"Willie" wrote in message
...
I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie


If you set up in a RAID setup you will get increased speed but the problem
is if one drive dies you are up the creek without a paddle. SATA reduces the
cabling within the case and should give better airflow but the SATA
connectors are pretty fagiule and if you have a tight fit ( have 2 graphic
cards ) they are easily broke.


  #7 (permalink)  
Old March 7th 07, 03:00 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Charlie Tame
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Posts: 2,383
Default SATA vs IDE

SATA is faster but not that much faster, however if you plan to use both
types then install the OS on a SATA drive. There's one caveat. Most BIOS don't
have a "Boot from drive X" option and they pick an IDE drive first so when
you install the OS you can end up with an inoperable system if the first IDE
drive later fails, even if it is not the OS drive. The caveat therefore is
to remove ALL other drives when installing the OS. This shouldn't happen but
I've been nailed twice by a non OS drive failure that's taken out the OS
despite the fact that the OS wasn't installed on it. If there's only one
drive then the installer can't put stuff where it shouldn't.

If you have a couple of 5 1/4 slots consider fitting slide mounts as they
make cloning a spare OS drive much easier and the extra space improves
ventilation. Slide mounts for SATA are compact, their counterparts for IDE
drives are not and are less practical. Compusa had an IDE slide for about
$20 and the SATA slides are about $40 so you could make use of your old
hardware for backups etc. The IDE slide has the drive screwed inside an
inner slide but the SATA slides just accept a drive as it is, if you are
interested in that path it's worth thinking about before you take the case
apart as it makes changes a lot simpler in future.

Charlie

"Willie" wrote in message
...
I was wondering,what is the better way to go concerning hard drive
configueratins. SATA or IDE.
I can go either way but at the moment I'm using 2 IDE hard drives but am
thinking of going with SATA.

Willie


 




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