- Sep 2, 2004
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I was wondering how much of a noticable performance difference there is between a SATA 133 hd and a ATA 100 hd, both with 8mb cache, 7200rpm.
Originally posted by: bob4432
from what i have read, at this point the sata drives are just pata drives with different connectors, except the raptors, so i don't think you will notice anything different
Hmm, talking about the bridges on many drives that basicly is an SATA adaptor for a PATA drive?Originally posted by: bob4432
from what i have read, at this point the sata drives are just pata drives with different connectors......
Originally posted by: Subhuman25
Originally posted by: bob4432
from what i have read, at this point the sata drives are just pata drives with different connectors, except the raptors, so i don't think you will notice anything different
And just how are Raptors the exception?
I'll tell you...they aren't.Raptors are exactly the same,just different speed. 10,000 RPM vs 7,200 RPM drives.It has nothing to do with SATA vs PATA
Originally posted by: DrCool
I recently ran HD Tach 3.0.1.0 on my system:
1 Seagate Barracuda IV 80GB ATA100 7200rpm 2mb cache
1 Seagate 7200.7 80GB SATA 8MB cache
SATA was connected via onboard PROMISE FAST TRACK 276
BURST SPEED
ata100 - 51.5MB/s
sata - 80.9MB/s
RANDOM ACCESS
ata100 - 13.8MS
sata - 12.8MS
AVERAGE READ
ata100 - 37.5MB/s
sata - 47.2MB/s
CPU Utilization
ata100 - 14%
sata - 4%
so, I wouldn't call the difference MINIMAL.. but substantial!
also note that SEAGATE is the only current HD manufacturer producing NATIVE SATA drives..
Originally posted by: bob4432
Originally posted by: Subhuman25
Originally posted by: bob4432
from what i have read, at this point the sata drives are just pata drives with different connectors, except the raptors, so i don't think you will notice anything different
And just how are Raptors the exception?
I'll tell you...they aren't.Raptors are exactly the same,just different speed. 10,000 RPM vs 7,200 RPM drives.It has nothing to do with SATA vs PATA
without doing a bunch of reseach i remeber that the new 2nd gen raptors were using some scsi type queuing or something to be a little better than the older ones in addition to just an increase in spindle speed.
Originally posted by: DrCool
bob4432
I appreciate you posting your scores, but you can't directly compare them to my results, unless you have the EXACT same setup. If i put the two drives you listed in my setup, and benchmarked them, then we'd have a fair playing field, or if you put my two in yours.. but otherwise, it's not a fair comparison
here is my complete setup:
Intel Penitum IV 1.80 478PIN Willamette (256KB Level 2 Cache, .18 micron, 1.75v core)
ASUS P4PE Deluxe (Bios 1007, Intel 845PE chipset, Promise FastTrack 276 SATA)
512MB x 1 Crucial PC2100 (cas 2.5)
BFG nVidia GeForce FX5200 AGP 256MB (4x AGP)
LiteOn 16x DVD-ROM IDE
Sony 1.44MB Floppy Drive
Seagate 80GB Barracuda IV ATA/100 (7200rpm, 2MB cache)
Seagate 80GB 7200.7 SATA (7200rpm, 8MB cache)
Enermax 350W Whisper Power Supply
Originally posted by: DrCool
I recently ran HD Tach 3.0.1.0 on my system:
1 Seagate Barracuda IV 80GB ATA100 7200rpm 2mb cache
1 Seagate 7200.7 80GB SATA 8MB cache
SATA was connected via onboard PROMISE FAST TRACK 276
BURST SPEED
ata100 - 51.5MB/s
sata - 80.9MB/s
RANDOM ACCESS
ata100 - 13.8MS
sata - 12.8MS
AVERAGE READ
ata100 - 37.5MB/s
sata - 47.2MB/s
CPU Utilization
ata100 - 14%
sata - 4%
so, I wouldn't call the difference MINIMAL.. but substantial!
also note that SEAGATE is the only current HD manufacturer producing NATIVE SATA drives..
Originally posted by: stelleg151
Ok, as usual this thread has wandered a bit. Only the first couple of guys actually attempted to answer the question. But from the jist of things its sounding like the answer is no, the difference is basically negligable between ATA 100 and SATA 133 (both with 7200rpm and 8mb cache).
Correct me if I'm wrong.
Originally posted by: Viper96720
Originally posted by: stelleg151
Ok, as usual this thread has wandered a bit. Only the first couple of guys actually attempted to answer the question. But from the jist of things its sounding like the answer is no, the difference is basically negligable between ATA 100 and SATA 133 (both with 7200rpm and 8mb cache).
Correct me if I'm wrong.
Yep since transfer speeds are well below those standards.. Not counting burst transfer rates. Put a bunch in raid-0 and you'll get closer.
Originally posted by: Sunner
The Cuda 7200.7 is two generations newer than the IV, it has 8 MB of cache vs 2 MB for the IV, and S-ATA 7200.7's come with their acoustic management turned off by default.
Hardly a fair comparison.