Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ATA100/133 on BX boards

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ATA100/133 on BX boards

    hello all,

    would one benifit from using an ATA100 or ATA133 drive on either P2B or Asus P3B Mobos... i need to continue using mu existing machine while i make a new one [my cah flow hit real bad these 2 months!!]

    So will i benifit from using ATA133 on the P2b or P3b-F mobo and which would be better to use ?

    Also will REALLY benifit if i use a RAID controller on either of these boards ?
    Last edited by dizzynoodle; 10 November 2001, 15:59.
    Asus P2B @ 100Mhz
    PIII 800 / 133Mhz running @100MHZ = 600MHZ!!! VIA Asus Slotkey
    SimpleTECH 128MB X 3/ 100Mhz
    IBM 9.GB Ultrawide Scsi LVD
    IBM 18gb secondary drive @ 7200
    Maxtor 37GB storage drive @ 5400
    Marvel G200 TV
    Microtek E6 scanner via scsi card {adaptec 1502}
    HP CD12ri CDRW 12X10X32 BurnProof!
    Creative Infra48 CD ROM
    Creative AWE64 Gold [ISA]
    Realtek Chip NIC 10/100
    21' Samsung Syncmaster 1000p
    Firewire card
    Mini USB hub
    8 port Compex 10/100 hub
    Sandisk Reader - USB
    Cordless Logitec Mouse
    Iomega Zip100 [the old ugly one!]
    HP 1220 C - A3 printer

  • #2
    I personally think that it wouldn't make too much difference at all.

    But what do I know

    AMD Phenom 9650, 8GB, 4x1TB, 2x22 DVD-RW, 2x9600GT, 23.6' ASUS, Vista Ultimate
    AMD X2 7750, 4GB, 1x1TB 2x500, 1x22 DVD-RW, 1x8500GT, 22" Acer, OS X 10.5.8
    Acer 6930G, T6400, 4GB, 500GB, 16", Vista Premium
    Lenovo Ideapad S10e, 2GB, 500GB, 10", OS X 10.5.8

    Comment


    • #3
      ATA-33,66,133, etc only matter during the burst, when the data is coming from the HD's cache.
      Even IBM says the gxp throughput is 20-25MB/s.
      Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.

      Comment


      • #4
        so i guess, i'm not really "losing out" on the 80GB maxtor 7200 rpm drive power by putting it on a BX board... so would i really then benifit by using a promise ATA100 card [with single drive not RAID setup] or not running on win2k ?

        Also, would u say that there's a difference between the performance of the P2B or the P3B-F with the drives.. ?
        Asus P2B @ 100Mhz
        PIII 800 / 133Mhz running @100MHZ = 600MHZ!!! VIA Asus Slotkey
        SimpleTECH 128MB X 3/ 100Mhz
        IBM 9.GB Ultrawide Scsi LVD
        IBM 18gb secondary drive @ 7200
        Maxtor 37GB storage drive @ 5400
        Marvel G200 TV
        Microtek E6 scanner via scsi card {adaptec 1502}
        HP CD12ri CDRW 12X10X32 BurnProof!
        Creative Infra48 CD ROM
        Creative AWE64 Gold [ISA]
        Realtek Chip NIC 10/100
        21' Samsung Syncmaster 1000p
        Firewire card
        Mini USB hub
        8 port Compex 10/100 hub
        Sandisk Reader - USB
        Cordless Logitec Mouse
        Iomega Zip100 [the old ugly one!]
        HP 1220 C - A3 printer

        Comment


        • #5
          I've said it before and I'll say it again.

          A single drive, even the fastest in the entire world, won't use the bandwidth of even an Ultra33 connection. In fact, most won't use the bandwidth of PIO4.

          TWO drives, on the other hand, will burst at speeds that will flood the U33 bus - so keep 'em on separate channels.

          If you intend to load up your channels, then yes U66 makes a difference. But that's it. U66->U100 is a pointless change. Absolutely, completely pointless. Anyone who thinks there is a difference is seeing driver optimization, not hardware speed changes.

          - Gurm
          The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

          I'm the least you could do
          If only life were as easy as you
          I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
          If only life were as easy as you
          I would still get screwed

          Comment


          • #6
            The only scenario where you might be able to tell a difference is if you are using very large single files (huge bmp's or video files), most current IDE drives can transfer more than 33 MB/s, at least on the first part of the disk.
            "That's right fool! Now I'm a flying talking donkey!"

            P4 2.66, 512 mb PC2700, ATI Radeon 9000, Seagate Barracude IV 80 gb, Acer Al 732 17" TFT

            Comment


            • #7
              One question I've got are they intending to increase drive speeds to 10k? This would help improve transfer rates although the drives would get hotter.
              Chief Lemon Buyer no more Linux sucks but not as much
              Weather nut and sad git.

              My Weather Page

              Comment


              • #8
                dizzynoodle:

                I use a Promise IDE controller for my HDDs. I know that the speed advantage in doing so is minor but I’ll take anything to decrease the bottleneck. This isn’t an expensive uption.
                To me, the main advantage of using a controller card is that it allows me to have my burner and DVD-ROM with channels of their own (no slaved drives) and avoid the conflicts that can come up with which drive on which channel and which is slaved to what etc to get DMA enabled properly. On my system each of my four drives has a channel to itself and DMA is enabled for all.
                The only other thing I did was move my swapfile to a 1GB partition of its own. It is isolated by itself on the first partition [D:] of the HDD on the Promise’s Secondary Channel. It can fragment all it wants in there. Since I have 512MB system RAM, my swap file “in use” doesn’t get very active beyond what Win98SE needs for its own purposes.
                Here are my HDTach reults and my current system:

                HD Tach v2.61 (Unregistered demo)
                SCAN >DEFRAG >RESTART >TEST.
                ==
                Promise Ultra66 IDE0
                30GB Maxtor +40 7200RPM ATA66 [UDMA4](C,E,F,G,H)
                Model#: 53073U6
                Random Access Time:10.3ms
                Read Burst Speed: 56.5mbps
                Read Speed Max.: 30385.0kps
                Read Speed Min.: 23304.0kps
                Read Speed Avg.: 29066.2kps
                CPU Utilization: 4.7%
                ==
                Promise Ultra66 IDE1
                30GB Maxtor +40 7200RPM ATA66 [UDMA4](D,I,J,K,L,M)
                Model#: 53073U6
                Random Access Time:10.4ms
                Read Burst Speed: 56.2ms
                Read Speed Max.: 30381.0kps
                Read Speed Min.: 24339.0kps
                Read Speed Avg.: 29095.9kps
                CPU Utilization: 4.8%
                ==
                Win98SE clean
                P3 800E slot 1
                512MB PC133 @ 100MHz CAS2
                Asus P3B-F i440BX

                I’ll soon be building a new system (includes P4 2.0MHz; Asus P4T-E i850/478; 1GB RDRAM; 2x80GB Maxtor D740X ATA133 HDDs) and will use a Promise Ultra 133 IDE controller; not for the speed increase, from the above test one can see it is mostly a burst improvement, but for the convenience of avoiding that master/slave/DMA/where the burner should be hoo-hah.

                Happy trails,
                WinXP HE SP1& DX9b; Lian-Li PC-6089 mid alum case; Enermax 550W PSU; P4 2.8b retail; Asus P4T533-C s478/i850e; 1GB PC1066 RIMMs; Promise Ultra133 IDE PCI controller; 2x80GB Maxtor D740x 7200RPM ATA-133 HDDs; OrangeLink FireWire 800/1394b PCI card:
                1x250GB Maxtor One Touch USB2/fw external Ultra ATA-133 7200RPM HDD; Toshiba 16x/48x DVD-ROM; Plextor PX-708A 8xDVD?R/RW CD-R/RW burner; Radeon 9800 XT retail; DVI: Samsung SyncMaster 213L 21.3" TFT; VGA: ViewSonic 22? P225f; TV OUT S-Video: Sony 36? WEGA XBR400 NTSC; TerraTec DMX 6fire LT sound card to Denon 3802 7x110W based HT; on-board LAN to Alcatel ADSL modem; Canon S750 USB printer; Canon D125O USB2 scanner; Logitech diNovo Media Desktop (Bluetooth cordless keyboard/MX900 optical mouse); Logitech Freedom 2.4 Cordless USB Joystick; Logitech WingMan Strike Force 3D USB joystick; Logitech 2.4GHz Cordless Gamepad/Rumblepad.

                Comment


                • #9
                  CHHAS:

                  The fastest IBM SCSI drives right now can only transfer 25MB/sec. sustained. And those are 15k drives.

                  No drive on earth can do 33MB/sec. sustained - and CERTAINLY not any IDE drives, which are more in the 15MB/sec. sustained range.

                  - Gurm
                  The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

                  I'm the least you could do
                  If only life were as easy as you
                  I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
                  If only life were as easy as you
                  I would still get screwed

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I'm trying to install the new 80GB drive on my P3B-F system thru Win2k diskmanager... and i keep getting an error that the drive is too big !!! at 74.55GB...surely as one partition... what's happening here ? I'm using the quick format opition as i don't think that i need to do a full format for the new HDD...

                    whatcha think ?
                    Asus P2B @ 100Mhz
                    PIII 800 / 133Mhz running @100MHZ = 600MHZ!!! VIA Asus Slotkey
                    SimpleTECH 128MB X 3/ 100Mhz
                    IBM 9.GB Ultrawide Scsi LVD
                    IBM 18gb secondary drive @ 7200
                    Maxtor 37GB storage drive @ 5400
                    Marvel G200 TV
                    Microtek E6 scanner via scsi card {adaptec 1502}
                    HP CD12ri CDRW 12X10X32 BurnProof!
                    Creative Infra48 CD ROM
                    Creative AWE64 Gold [ISA]
                    Realtek Chip NIC 10/100
                    21' Samsung Syncmaster 1000p
                    Firewire card
                    Mini USB hub
                    8 port Compex 10/100 hub
                    Sandisk Reader - USB
                    Cordless Logitec Mouse
                    Iomega Zip100 [the old ugly one!]
                    HP 1220 C - A3 printer

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      My Western Digital WD400BB sustains 21 megabytes/sec over more than half the drive, and bottoms out at 17 megs/sec. This is on a 440BX UDMA/33 controller. Burst speed hits 27 megs/sec. It does just tad better if I use the CUBX's onboard UDMA/66 controller but not enough to make the system stability issues worth the hassle.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Unstable?

                        Jon, what's so unstable about the onboard CMD controller on the CUBX? Install the latest bios for the CUBX and the CMD controller operates as an ATA/100 controller. My 40Gb IBM 60GXP has a burst speed of at least 80Mbs/sec on the CMD controller. The scale only goes as high as 80Mbs on the HD Tach test.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Patrick - no drive bursts at 80MB/sec. Honestly. I've got a couple of those drives - they don't burst anywhere near that. It's the driver faking you out. Sorry, man.

                          - Gurm
                          The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

                          I'm the least you could do
                          If only life were as easy as you
                          I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
                          If only life were as easy as you
                          I would still get screwed

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            going from udma 33 to 100 will give a noticable difference.
                            While no drive really saturates a 33 bus
                            the decrease in latency, and the fact the ide controller is only take 1/3 of the pci bus bandwidth at 100 than at 33 produces a noticable diference.

                            I noticed the diffrerence, perhaps not in pure throughput but access's that use the drive cache certainly benefit from the increased bandwidth.

                            In fact I found going from udm33 to 60 is quite noticable itself in normal windows operations, loading programs which typicaly can be cached quite well by the drives cache..etc

                            you can get quite large burst speeds over an ata100 channel if the data is comming largely from the drive cache's, since most decent drives have 2Mb cache(8mb for wd se's woohoo). Despite what some "experts" say.
                            a 60Mb/s burst over an ata100 channel is quite possible, if it is comming from the drives cache, 80- might be pushing it tho

                            one thing going for ata133 is that also has *much* larger size limit for your drive size(48 bit adressing)

                            But if you have a slow system, the effects will not be that noticeable (BX's...etc)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Marshmallowman
                              going from udma 33 to 100 will give a noticable difference.
                              While no drive really saturates a 33 bus
                              the decrease in latency, and the fact the ide controller is only take 1/3 of the pci bus bandwidth at 100 than at 33 produces a noticable diference.


                              Not to sound like Gurm, but.....ummmm, NO. The IDE controller speed shouldn't change PCI utilization one bit. Where would this supposed decrease in latency come from?


                              I noticed the diffrerence, perhaps not in pure throughput but access's that use the drive cache certainly benefit from the increased bandwidth.


                              The cache is the <I>only</I> part of the drive that might benefit from something other than ATA-33.


                              In fact I found going from udm33 to 60 is quite noticable itself in normal windows operations, loading programs which typicaly can be cached quite well by the drives cache..etc

                              Sounds like you're faking yourself out.


                              one thing going for ata133 is that also has *much* larger size limit for your drive size(48 bit adressing)


                              And this affects just about nobody right now. Most people's problems right now are with the addressing scheme of their FS, not their HD.

                              <br>

                              In other news, I was just reading the data sheet for the new 120gxp series (supposedly shipping next month). Average seek/latency times are 8.5/4.17, and sustained data rate is listed as 48-23MB/s, compared to 40.8-20.9 for the 60gxp. Nice! Well, nice, if they don't fail like crazy. I don't think that anyone will see these numbers, but I'm glad that they went up, rather than down, with the 40GB platters.
                              Last edited by Wombat; 11 November 2001, 21:26.
                              Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X