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| Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible with Serial-ATA ? As the subject alerady said I want to know if Ultra-ATA (for hard discs) is compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible with Serial-ATA ? If Serial-ATA is the answer: Is Ultra-ATA better or worse then (Serial)-ATA ? Oliver |
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| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible with Serial-ATA ? Oliver Boswell wrote: > As the subject alerady said I want to know if > Ultra-ATA (for hard discs) is compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or > compatible with Serial-ATA ? > > If Serial-ATA is the answer: Is Ultra-ATA better or worse then > (Serial)-ATA ? Go with SATA. SATA is the standard now. The cables are different (as is the protocol/drives/etc..) for the three you mentioned - although you *could* use regular 40 wire cables with UltraATA/ATA... You lose out and are not actually getting everything you could out of it. Of course - there are SATA/SATA2 drives out there - and in order to utilize their full functionality - all things muct be ready to do so in the chain of hardware (drive, cable, connection to motherboard...) SATA is faster... SATA2 even more so. None of that matters if the drive access is not your bottleneck in your current system. -- Shenan Stanley MS-MVP -- How To Ask Questions The Smart Way http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html |
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| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible withSerial-ATA ? "Go with" ????? This is a laptop forum. You don't have a choice of which to "go with" on any given laptop. The laptop's designers made the "go with" decision and you are stuck with it, because parallel ATA (IDE/ATA/UATA) is incompatible with serial ATA (SATA). Shenan Stanley wrote: > Oliver Boswell wrote: > >>As the subject alerady said I want to know if >>Ultra-ATA (for hard discs) is compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or >>compatible with Serial-ATA ? >> >>If Serial-ATA is the answer: Is Ultra-ATA better or worse then >>(Serial)-ATA ? > > > Go with SATA. > SATA is the standard now. > > The cables are different (as is the protocol/drives/etc..) for the three you > mentioned - although you *could* use regular 40 wire cables with > UltraATA/ATA... You lose out and are not actually getting everything you > could out of it. > > Of course - there are SATA/SATA2 drives out there - and in order to utilize > their full functionality - all things muct be ready to do so in the chain of > hardware (drive, cable, connection to motherboard...) > > SATA is faster... SATA2 even more so. None of that matters if the drive > access is not your bottleneck in your current system. > |
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| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible withSerial-ATA ? Shenan Stanley wrote: > > Oliver Boswell wrote: > > As the subject alerady said I want to know if > > Ultra-ATA (for hard discs) is compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or > > compatible with Serial-ATA ? > > > > If Serial-ATA is the answer: Is Ultra-ATA better or worse then > > (Serial)-ATA ? > > Go with SATA. > SATA is the standard now. > > The cables are different (as is the protocol/drives/etc..) for the three you > mentioned - although you *could* use regular 40 wire cables with > UltraATA/ATA... You lose out and are not actually getting everything you > could out of it. > > Of course - there are SATA/SATA2 drives out there - and in order to utilize > their full functionality - all things muct be ready to do so in the chain of > hardware (drive, cable, connection to motherboard...) > > SATA is faster... SATA2 even more so. None of that matters if the drive > access is not your bottleneck in your current system. Not in my experience, it's not. Actually, there's little difference in real-world speed between ATA66 and SATA-300, although you can get more powerful controllers (Areca) for the latter, which *do* make a difference. And I think any system more powerful than a P3 1GHz is going to be bottlenecked at the hard drive I/O. In other words, the vast majority of systems out there today. But that's just my take on the issue. Odie -- Retrodata www.retrodata.co.uk Globally Local Data Recovery Experts |
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| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible with Serial-ATA ? In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Odie Ferrous <odie_ferrous********.com> wrote: > Shenan Stanley wrote: >> >> Oliver Boswell wrote: >> > As the subject alerady said I want to know if >> > Ultra-ATA (for hard discs) is compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or >> > compatible with Serial-ATA ? >> > >> > If Serial-ATA is the answer: Is Ultra-ATA better or worse then >> > (Serial)-ATA ? >> >> Go with SATA. >> SATA is the standard now. >> >> The cables are different (as is the protocol/drives/etc..) for the three you >> mentioned - although you *could* use regular 40 wire cables with >> UltraATA/ATA... You lose out and are not actually getting everything you >> could out of it. >> >> Of course - there are SATA/SATA2 drives out there - and in order to utilize >> their full functionality - all things muct be ready to do so in the chain of >> hardware (drive, cable, connection to motherboard...) >> >> SATA is faster... SATA2 even more so. None of that matters if the drive >> access is not your bottleneck in your current system. > > Not in my experience, it's not. Actually, there's little difference in > real-world speed between ATA66 and SATA-300, although you can get more > powerful controllers (Areca) for the latter, which *do* make a > difference. > And I think any system more powerful than a P3 1GHz is going to be > bottlenecked at the hard drive I/O. In other words, the vast majority > of systems out there today. > But that's just my take on the issue. I have a pair of Samsungs which are identical, except for the interface. One is ATA100, one SATA. No speed differencfe noticeable. I agree that a P3@1GHz should be able to saturate most current 7200 rpm disks in some applications. And of course if you have two disks on an ATA bus, some modern disks already can deliver a bit more data than ATA133 can transport, which gives SATA an edge in some situations. But keep in mind that PCI has a theroetical upper speed limit of 135MB/s and a practical limit on a slower chipset more like 70-80MB/s or so. Arno |
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| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible withSerial-ATA ? Arno Wagner wrote: > I have a pair of Samsungs which are identical, except for the > interface. One is ATA100, one SATA. No speed differencfe noticeable. > I agree that a P3@1GHz should be able to saturate most current 7200 > rpm disks in some applications. And of course if you have two disks > on an ATA bus, some modern disks already can deliver a bit more data > than ATA133 can transport, which gives SATA an edge in some > situations. But keep in mind that PCI has a theroetical upper > speed limit of 135MB/s and a practical limit on a slower chipset > more like 70-80MB/s or so. In practice, the cache hits in the L2 cache, and in the system memory used for cache, make the difference theoretical, except in applications where there would be both few cache hits, and a need for the higher data rates. Such applications aren't that rare any more, such as non-linear video editing. Forget about PCI's bandwidth, as PCI Express is what is used in the latest systems. |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| RE: COMPATIBLE? | pietrina23 | Microsoft Office | 1 | 07-27-2007 09:50 AM |
| RE: COMPATIBLE? | pietrina23 | Microsoft Office | 1 | 07-27-2007 09:20 AM |
| Are 2,5" Serial-ATA (SATA) hard discs downwards compatible with (simple) IDE/ATA ? | Oliver Boswell | Mobile PC Hardware | 1 | 01-19-2007 07:16 PM |
| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible with Serial-ATA ? | Yves Leclerc | Microsoft Office | 0 | 01-15-2007 11:19 AM |
| Re: Is Ultra-ATA compatible with (simple) ATA/IDE or compatible with Serial-ATA ? | Yves Leclerc | Windows XP | 0 | 01-04-2007 02:57 AM |
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