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-   -   two hd's on same IDE channel (http://www.hardwarebanter.com/showthread.php?t=3922)

~misfit~ March 11th 04 08:32 PM

Mike Walsh wrote:
What about sequential data transfer?


What about it Mike? I'm not sure what you mean by your well worded and
carefully thought out question.
--
~misfit~

~misfit~ wrote:

I've tested it, althought with my relatively new nForce2 Ultra 400
board, and having an old 120MB drive in PIO mode running alongside a
modern drive running UltraDMA mode 5 on the same channel made
virtually no difference to access times of the modern drive.
--
~misfit~




Mike Walsh March 12th 04 06:20 PM


The access time is determined by the physical attributes of the drive, i.e. rotational speed and head seek time, not by the I/O protocol. Sequential data transfer of a modern drive can be limited by I/O protocol; as slow as 2 MB/sec in PIO mode even if the drive is capable of 50 MB/sec.

~misfit~ wrote:

Mike Walsh wrote:
What about sequential data transfer?


What about it Mike? I'm not sure what you mean by your well worded and
carefully thought out question.
--
~misfit~

~misfit~ wrote:

I've tested it, althought with my relatively new nForce2 Ultra 400
board, and having an old 120MB drive in PIO mode running alongside a
modern drive running UltraDMA mode 5 on the same channel made
virtually no difference to access times of the modern drive.
--
~misfit~


--
Mike Walsh
West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S.A.

kony March 12th 04 07:47 PM

On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 18:20:32 GMT, Mike Walsh
wrote:


The access time is determined by the physical attributes of th more



I feel like I just landed on mars.



VWWall March 12th 04 09:19 PM

kony wrote:

On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 18:20:32 GMT, Mike Walsh
wrote:


The access time is determined by the physical attributes of th more




I feel like I just landed on mars.

Not mars. There's signs of possible life there! :-)

Virg Wall
--

It is vain to do with more
what can be done with fewer.
William of Occam.

Bubba March 12th 04 11:11 PM

Steve James's log on stardate 09 ožu 2004

I have two HD's on the same IDE channel, I think one is faster than
the other (ATA and RPM), will the fastest one be 'held back' by the
slowest one or not ?


No, no and no again. Old urban legend ... ATA interface, until 3rd
volume of ATA 7 standard is paralel protocol. So, what happens with
_any_ two devices conected to one channal is very simple to understand.
Whatever tries to acces the device on one channal wil be able to to
that only to the _one_ device in the same cycle. That is the biggest
problem of ATA interface, and only then (communication between two
devices on same channal) will come to _latency_ since controller can
communicate with only one device per cycle, wich indirectly brings
slower transfer. But, devices will comunicate with controller
independently with the speed they decide, regardles on other device's
transfer protocol.

I have my O/S and program files on the main (fastest) drive and only
use the slower one for storage and the pagefile. (to reduce head
travel)


Fine. You don't have to worry that your fast drive will work any
slower.


--
Ja sjedoh, svi sjedoshe
Ja ustah, svi ustashe!

~misfit~ March 13th 04 12:06 AM

Mike Walsh wrote:
The access time is determined by the physical attributes of the
drive, i.e. rotational speed and head seek time, not by the I/O
protocol. Sequential data transfer of a modern drive can be limited
by I/O protocol; as slow as 2 MB/sec in PIO mode even if the drive is
capable of 50 MB/sec.


Ok, thanks for clearing that up (I think). Maybe, instead of saying
"virtually no difference to access times of the modern drive" I should have
said that I benchmarked the system with a PIO drive and a UDMA drive on the
same channel and the benchmarks (which included read/write of various sizes)
was virtually unchanged for the UDMA drive even though it was sharing a
channel with a PIO drive. Of course. the PIO drive did top out at just under
2MB/sec but, as long as I wasn't accessing it at the same time as I was
accessing the UDMA drive it made no difference to the UDMA drive having a
PIO drive on the same ribbon compared to it being alone on the channel.
Better?
--
~misfit~

~misfit~ wrote:

Mike Walsh wrote:
What about sequential data transfer?


What about it Mike? I'm not sure what you mean by your well worded
and carefully thought out question.
--
~misfit~

~misfit~ wrote:

I've tested it, althought with my relatively new nForce2 Ultra 400
board, and having an old 120MB drive in PIO mode running alongside
a modern drive running UltraDMA mode 5 on the same channel made
virtually no difference to access times of the modern drive.
--
~misfit~





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