Tom's Guide > Forum > Storage > Flash Media > Does my new ssd need any drivers?

Does my new ssd need any drivers?

Forum Storage : Flash Media - Does my new ssd need any drivers?

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I got a kingston ssdnow v series. Do i need any drivers for it?

------------------------------ Core i7 920 @3.8ghz|Foxconn Renaissance Motherboard|2 GTX 260s in SLI|750 Watt PSU|6 GB RAM|80GB Intel-X18 SSD|Windows 7
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no, it should be plug and play just like any hard drive. but the ssd's do have firmware that can be updated, might want to look into upgrading that, you could get some performance increases from it.

Reply to paperfox

If you got Vista or Win7 set the SATA mode to AHCI instead of IDE, for maximum performance and features.

------------------------------ ...man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but usually manages to pick himself up, walk over or around it, and carry on.
Reply to sub mesa

sub mesa wrote :

If you got Vista or Win7 set the SATA mode to AHCI instead of IDE, for maximum performance and features.



What does that do?

------------------------------ Core i7 920 @3.8ghz|Foxconn Renaissance Motherboard|2 GTX 260s in SLI|750 Watt PSU|6 GB RAM|80GB Intel-X18 SSD|Windows 7
Reply to nonxcarbonx

AHCI is the native protocol to access Serial ATA devices, and allows the usage of both NCQ (Native Command Queueing) and hot-swap functionality; which are not available if you pick IDE emulation mode. Windows XP cannot work with AHCI without additional drivers; but Vista and Win7 can and is the prefered method for Serial ATA devices.

For SSDs, the NCQ feauture allows performance benefits.

------------------------------ ...man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but usually manages to pick himself up, walk over or around it, and carry on.
Reply to sub mesa

sub mesa wrote :

AHCI is the native protocol to access Serial ATA devices, and allows the usage of both NCQ (Native Command Queueing) and hot-swap functionality; which are not available if you pick IDE emulation mode. Windows XP cannot work with AHCI without additional drivers; but Vista and Win7 can and is the prefered method for Serial ATA devices.

For SSDs, the NCQ feauture allows performance benefits.



When I selected AHCI, I got a blue screen of death upon loading windows. Is there any way I can fix/configure this, or am I stuck without it?

------------------------------ Core i7 920 @3.8ghz|Foxconn Renaissance Motherboard|2 GTX 260s in SLI|750 Watt PSU|6 GB RAM|80GB Intel-X18 SSD|Windows 7
Reply to nonxcarbonx

What kind of Windows version do you use? Normally you set this before installing Windows. If you already installed windows you can leave the setting as it was, but you will probably lose TRIM support.

------------------------------ ...man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but usually manages to pick himself up, walk over or around it, and carry on.
Reply to sub mesa

nonxcarbonx wrote :

When I selected AHCI, I got a blue screen of death upon loading windows. Is there any way I can fix/configure this, or am I stuck without it?

Look at the "FAQ: Switching Storage Controllers w/o Reinstalling Windows" sticky topic at the top of the list of threads for this forum.

Reply to sminlal

i can't find this, the forums here are weird. no worries, i did a google search and founded it!

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Reply to expxe
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