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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

Hi everybody,

It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard drive
this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards I'm
interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.

Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's more
to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

Jim Owens wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard drive
> this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards I'm
> interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
>
> Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's more
> to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
> advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.
>
>

Since all ATA HDs have STRs of well under 100 MB/s, there is no current
bandwidth advantage of SATA over PATA. That said, the fastest ATA HDs
(the Raptors) happen to have SATA instead of PATA interfaces.

The real advantage of SATA over PATA today is better cabling. Those skinny
SATA cables do not block case airflow as much as wide PATA cables. And, SATA
cables are longer than spec-conforming PATA cables, which matters in large
PC and server cases.

Finally, SATA has a future -- including higher bandwidth -- while PATA is,
IMHO, at its end of life.
--
Cheers, Bob

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

Jim Owens wrote:

> It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard drive
> this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards I'm
> interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
>
> Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's more
> to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
> advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.



sata has no performance benefit over ide (100/133)

given compatibility issues, you're still far
better off with ide drives

and if the issue is easy backup, you'll find
that dos Ghost works fine with ide drives. :)
imho, sata is still not ready for prime time
(unless all you do as an OS is 2k or xp, but
if you do Linux, drivers might be an issue
there too (are you doing sata raid? or what?)

check www.newegg.com coz 5 weeks ago they
had oem NSW2003 with dos ghost on it for $20

bill

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

Jim Owens wrote:

>
> Hi everybody,
>
> It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard drive
> this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards I'm
> interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
>
> Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's more
> to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
> advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.

SATA per se gives no real advantages at this time except longer, thinner
cables and support for hot-swap if the controller allows it (all of them
are supposed to but not all do). The benefit of the higher interface speed
is negligible in the real world--no commercially available drive has a
sustained transfer rate high enough to strain UDMA-100.

The real benefit is drives that are made with SATA interfaces generally
offer a bit more performance than those with PATA interfaces--the 10,000
RPM Western Digital Raptors are available only with SATA interfaces and
some other manufacturers ship their SATA drives with acoustic management
turned off and their PATA drives that are otherwise identical with it
turned on--with it turned on the drive is quieter but slower. Also, the
latest generation of ATA RAID controllers are made for SATA, not PATA, if
you need high performance RAID.

--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

"willbill" <trek@worldwide.net> wrote in message
news:cjkba501l6i@enews1.newsguy.com...
> Jim Owens wrote:
>
> > It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard
drive
> > this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards
I'm
> > interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
> >
> > Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's
more
> > to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
> > advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.
>
>
>
> sata has no performance benefit over ide (100/133)

Except that the fast ATA HD is SATA and that's the WDC Raptor.

> given compatibility issues, you're still far
> better off with ide drives

Nonsense. There no significant compatibility issues.

> and if the issue is easy backup, you'll find
> that dos Ghost works fine with ide drives. :)
> imho, sata is still not ready for prime time

Nonsense.

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

"willbill" <trek@worldwide.net> wrote in message
news:cjkba501l6i@enews1.newsguy.com...
> Jim Owens wrote:
> and if the issue is easy backup, you'll find
> that dos Ghost works fine with ide drives. :)
> imho, sata is still not ready for prime time

I have used Ghost with SATA drives just fine as well.

--Dan

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

"J. Clarke" <jclarke@nospam.invalid> wrote in message
news:cjkd04089q@news4.newsguy.com...
> Jim Owens wrote:
>
> >
> > Hi everybody,
> >
> > It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard
drive
> > this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards
I'm
> > interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
> >
> > Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's
more
> > to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
> > advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.
>
> SATA per se gives no real advantages at this time except longer, thinner
> cables and support for hot-swap if the controller allows it (all of them
> are supposed to but not all do). The benefit of the higher interface
speed
> is negligible in the real world--no commercially available drive has a
> sustained transfer rate high enough to strain UDMA-100.
>
> The real benefit is drives that are made with SATA interfaces generally
> offer a bit more performance than those with PATA interfaces--the 10,000
> RPM Western Digital Raptors are available only with SATA interfaces and
> some other manufacturers ship their SATA drives with acoustic management
> turned off and their PATA drives that are otherwise identical with it
> turned on--with it turned on the drive is quieter but slower. Also, the
> latest generation of ATA RAID controllers are made for SATA, not PATA, if
> you need high performance RAID.
>
> --
> --John
> Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
> (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

I would add that with SATA you can attach up to 12 drives to a RAID
controller and save CPU cycles on a severe load. Depending on what you plan
to do with your rig, this may or may not be of interest.

Also no more messing with master/slaves jumpers as each drive has its own
cable.

I'll join others in saying that the sentence "SATA is not ready for prime
time" is utter nonsense. Linux will catch up sooner or later.

Anyway, if your main motivation is saving money PATA is cheaper...

Cheers

Art

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

ahedge wrote:

>
> "J. Clarke" <jclarke@nospam.invalid> wrote in message
> news:cjkd04089q@news4.newsguy.com...
>> Jim Owens wrote:
>>
>> >
>> > Hi everybody,
>> >
>> > It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard
> drive
>> > this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards
> I'm
>> > interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
>> >
>> > Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's
> more
>> > to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
>> > advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.
>>
>> SATA per se gives no real advantages at this time except longer, thinner
>> cables and support for hot-swap if the controller allows it (all of them
>> are supposed to but not all do). The benefit of the higher interface
> speed
>> is negligible in the real world--no commercially available drive has a
>> sustained transfer rate high enough to strain UDMA-100.
>>
>> The real benefit is drives that are made with SATA interfaces generally
>> offer a bit more performance than those with PATA interfaces--the 10,000
>> RPM Western Digital Raptors are available only with SATA interfaces and
>> some other manufacturers ship their SATA drives with acoustic management
>> turned off and their PATA drives that are otherwise identical with it
>> turned on--with it turned on the drive is quieter but slower. Also, the
>> latest generation of ATA RAID controllers are made for SATA, not PATA, if
>> you need high performance RAID.
>>
>> --
>> --John
>> Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
>> (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
>
> I would add that with SATA you can attach up to 12 drives to a RAID
> controller and save CPU cycles on a severe load. Depending on what you
> plan to do with your rig, this may or may not be of interest.

Doesn't really have anything to do with SATA--you can attach 12 drives to a
PATA RAID controller too.

> Also no more messing with master/slaves jumpers as each drive has its own
> cable.
>
> I'll join others in saying that the sentence "SATA is not ready for
> prime time" is utter nonsense. Linux will catch up sooner or later.

There are other problems--some of the current generation of chips are not
fully standards-compliant for example. The 2.6 kernel does have SATA
support, but I don't know how complete.

> Anyway, if your main motivation is saving money PATA is cheaper...
>
> Cheers
>
> Art

--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

dg wrote:

> "willbill" wrote

>> and if the issue is easy backup, you'll find
>> that dos Ghost works fine with ide drives. :)
>> imho, sata is still not ready for prime time


> I have used Ghost with SATA drives just fine as well.



would you kindly give some details, TIA

e.g. are you talking aobut backing up the whole
drive or only part of it?

and from within DOS or Windows or both?

assuming you mean Windows, which specific
Windows and with what service pack?

if one only has a single large sata hard drive
for Windows 2000 or XP (say 160GB with only
a single NTFS c:\ partition on it), can that
be backed up up OK from within Windows so that
it can replace a failed original sata drive?

bill

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

"willbill" <trek@worldwide.net> wrote in message
news:cjnbgu01gkg@enews2.newsguy.com...
> would you kindly give some details, TIA
>
> e.g. are you talking aobut backing up the whole
> drive or only part of it?
>
> and from within DOS or Windows or both?
>
> assuming you mean Windows, which specific
> Windows and with what service pack?
>
> if one only has a single large sata hard drive
> for Windows 2000 or XP (say 160GB with only
> a single NTFS c:\ partition on it), can that
> be backed up up OK from within Windows so that
> it can replace a failed original sata drive?
>
> bill
>

Sure. On my personal workstation at home I use an Intel D875PBZLK
motherboard with onboard SATA /ICH5R raid. I use 2 raptors in a raid 0
config, formatted to the full capacity, NTFS partition. I use Norton Ghost
2003. I have booted to a ghost floppy using MS-DOS and made a complete disk
backup to another raid array made up of SATA disks. The second array uses a
LSI Megaraid 150-4 controller and 3 WD 250GB SATA disks in a raid 5 config.
It may sound quite complicated, but within ghost you just see a source drive
and a destination-its not confusing at all. I have used it on Dell
Poweredge 2600 servers too, with PERC SCSI raid, no problem.

When you say back up within windows, I don't quite understand. When I try
to do a ghost backup within windows, the computer reboots and starts in a
DOS mode running ghost. Its not like the operation is completed within
windows. And yes, this works too just as well as a boot disk. A program
called Acronis Tru Image will image from within windows and at scheduled
times, ghost can't do that as far as I know. If your 160GB drive has been
backed up to a ghost image, but fails the next day, you can indeed restore
to the last ghost image. You just remove the bad drive and install a fresh
empty drive, boot to a ghost floppy and go through the options to restore an
image to a disk-and choose the fresh drive. Upon the next reboot you will
not even notice a difference between the old drive and your new drive-its
that simple.

I should say that on some SATA equipped machines I have run ghost 2003 on,
you need to disable "SATA enhanced mode" in the BIOS otherwise ghost locks
up while loading. Why this is necessary I don't know, but it doesn't seem
to cause any problems once you are aware of what needs to be done. I would
guess this will be fixed in future releases.

I love ghost, once you know ghost you can make HUGE tasks take only the
slightest amount of effort, like installing 300 new PCs in a library. I
would really like to become a Acronis Truimage expert, it has features that
amaze me.

Let me know if you have any more questions.
--Dan

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

In article <gYj7d.468207$OB3.35505@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>,
Ron Reaugh <rondashreaugh@att.net> writes

>Nonsense. There no significant compatibility issues.

Really? Look up Silicon Image and Seagate's spat over the Mod15Write
bug. Both companies pointing the finger at each other and the user is
in the middle.

--
..sigmonster on vacation

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

On Fri, 1 Oct 2004 10:49:18 -0700, "Jim Owens"
<bobsgambles@nowhere.com> wrote:

>
>Hi everybody,
>
> It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard drive
>this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards I'm
>interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
>
> Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's more
>to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
>advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.
>


SATA drives are mostly ATA drives with an extra chip which converts
the "old" ATA to "new" SATA. Just an extra layer of conversions added
to a simple ATA drive. Lots more to go wrong. But our resident SATA
gurus all had to have them and want you to have one too.

It's an IQ test really, with the usual jar of vaseline on the side ;)

There's a future for SATA when it becomes a more mature technology,
but not for the "ATA with SATA converter chip" drives you'd buy today.

If you're aware of how these standards and toys evolve eg
33,66,100,133,150SATA; I'd wait for the next step before becoming a
beta tester.

Just get a standard Western Digital drive in the size you want.

And don't believe everything they want to sell you.

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Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (More info?)

 

heretic@sata_n.com wrote:

> On Fri, 1 Oct 2004 10:49:18 -0700, "Jim Owens"
> <bobsgambles@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>>
>>Hi everybody,
>>
>> It's time for a new computer, and I was thinking of a SATA hard drive
>>this time around, however... I see that (at least on the motherboards I'm
>>interested in) the SATA throughput is 150 MB/s.
>>
>> Not much of a bump over ATA 133 at a glance, but I'm sure there's more
>>to the story than that. Could anyone clue me in on what additional
>>advantages the SATA standard brings over IDE drives? Thanks very much.
>>
>
>
> SATA drives are mostly ATA drives with an extra chip which converts
> the "old" ATA to "new" SATA. Just an extra layer of conversions added
> to a simple ATA drive. Lots more to go wrong. But our resident SATA
> gurus all had to have them and want you to have one too.
>
> It's an IQ test really, with the usual jar of vaseline on the side ;)
>
> There's a future for SATA when it becomes a more mature technology,
> but not for the "ATA with SATA converter chip" drives you'd buy today.
>
> If you're aware of how these standards and toys evolve eg
> 33,66,100,133,150SATA; I'd wait for the next step before becoming a
> beta tester.
>
> Just get a standard Western Digital drive in the size you want.

So what's the model number for a 10,000 RPM PATA WD drive? And if you're
not going with a Raptor then why a Western Digital instead of something
fast or quiet.

> And don't believe everything they want to sell you.

--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

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