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#1
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GA-7N400 Pro 2 Rev. 2.0 Optimization?
I hope someone will be able to help me get the most out of my system. I
know a little bit, but I am not really into tuning. I just want it to work... A brief history. I bought the system from a local computer store about 1.5 years ago. It had an AMD Athalon XP 2700+ CPU and 512 MB of PC2700 RAM running XP Pro on a different motherboard. About 4 months ago it died, the power supply dies and fried the mother board. I went back to the store and they replaced the motherboard with the GA-7N400 Pro 2 Rev. 2.0 that is in there now. At the same time I replace the primary hard drive, since I was going to have to reload Windows... Since I got the new motherboard I feel like the system performance is not where it should be. With the other motherboard I used to process SETI packets in about 10 hours, now I am taking 16 to 18 hours, and the system just seems sluggish. And authoring DVD's is down right painful... I have been looking at trying to tweak the system, but am not 100% sure where to begin. The first thing in noticed is that at least some of it is the hard drive. The new C: is a WD and runs at Ultra DMA 5 - Ultra 100 and has a sustained transfer rate of only 24.1 MB/Sec. The old drive which is now D: is a Maxtor and runs at Ultra DMA 6 - Ultra 133 with a sustained transfer rate of 49.3 MB/Sec. One of the reasons for the drive swap was also the increase capacity. The first thing I want to do is upgrade the HD. Everyone is talking about SATA which is supported in this MB. Any opinions about SATA really being better and are there any compatibility issues? Since I am not changing the motherboard I was not going to reinstall Windows and use something like Ghost to transfer everything to the new drive. I did this in my wife's system and it worked great, but in her case it was going from a 20GB ATA drive to a 60GB ATA drive, both Maxtor. I am concerned about ATA to SATA, because I have no experience with SATA... Secondly in tweaking the MB, the first thing I notices is a temperature warning before I do anything. The CPU seems to be running at 61-62 degrees. I am wondering if the guy a the store replaced the heat sync compound when he swapped the chip to the new system. Someone told me that you should replace the compound EVERY time you remove the heat sync? Is this a problem, or is the alarm just set to low? Finally I am thinking about adding a second 512 MB RAM (PC2700). I read something about some sort of memory interleave or something that was supposed to increase system performance. Does anyone know anything about this? I would really like to get another year or so out of the system. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#2
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William C wrote:
I hope someone will be able to help me get the most out of my system. I know a little bit, but I am not really into tuning. I just want it to work... A brief history. I bought the system from a local computer store about 1.5 years ago. It had an AMD Athalon XP 2700+ CPU and 512 MB of PC2700 RAM running XP Pro on a different motherboard. About 4 months ago it died, the power supply dies and fried the mother board. I went back to the store and they replaced the motherboard with the GA-7N400 Pro 2 Rev. 2.0 that is in there now. At the same time I replace the primary hard drive, since I was going to have to reload Windows... Since I got the new motherboard I feel like the system performance is not where it should be. With the other motherboard I used to process SETI packets in about 10 hours, now I am taking 16 to 18 hours, and the system just seems sluggish. And authoring DVD's is down right painful... To be honest it could be any number of issues with the drivers and set-up of XP. SETI/BOINC is heavily CPU bound, so this is unlikely to be a problem related to your hard disk/s. But for all we know, you now have something else new eating up available memory. It could even be spyware or a virus doing that. There's not enough information in front of me to diagnose this here and now. I have been looking at trying to tweak the system, but am not 100% sure where to begin. The first thing in noticed is that at least some of it is the hard drive. The new C: is a WD and runs at Ultra DMA 5 - Ultra 100 and has a sustained transfer rate of only 24.1 MB/Sec. The old drive which is now D: is a Maxtor and runs at Ultra DMA 6 - Ultra 133 with a sustained transfer rate of 49.3 MB/Sec. One of the reasons for the drive swap was also the increase capacity. Well, few drives can reach the maximum theoretical speed of the ATA or SATA channel anyway, so the difference between an ATA100 drive and a 133 model should certainly be smallish, not 50%! Are you saying it is ATA100 because you know that it is an ATA100/MODE 5 drive, or can you actually say that you *are seeing* MODE 5 in device manager?? We could be looking at an issue with the ATA controller drivers or even with the BIOS configuration. AFAIK, UDMA needs enabling in BIOS and defaults to disabled. Someone may correct me on that! I hope you have the correct cable on this drive too? So, look in device manger at the properties of the controller, check under advanced settings for UDMA MODE 5. To be honest, the WD is probably not a top flight drive, but 24.1 is hideous. Something ain't right! The first thing I want to do is upgrade the HD. Everyone is talking about SATA which is supported in this MB. Any opinions about SATA really being better and are there any compatibility issues? Since I am not changing the motherboard I was not going to reinstall Windows and use something like Ghost to transfer everything to the new drive. I did this in my wife's system and it worked great, but in her case it was going from a 20GB ATA drive to a 60GB ATA drive, both Maxtor. I am concerned about ATA to SATA, because I have no experience with SATA... I doubt if you would easily distinguish between a SATA 1 disk and a properly running ATA133 model, with the system you have, but you seem to have a problem with your ATA. (As an aside, with Maxtor drives, most of us would be well advised to download AMSET and turn off Acoustic Management, as the disks ship at a default of "quiet", which is enormously harmful to performance. But that is an aside...) If you go down the SATA route you will need to understand how to boot from SATA, install the SATA drivers in XP and so on, if you haven't installed the controller already that is. Secondly in tweaking the MB, the first thing I notices is a temperature warning before I do anything. The CPU seems to be running at 61-62 degrees. I am wondering if the guy a the store replaced the heat sync compound when he swapped the chip to the new system. Someone told me that you should replace the compound EVERY time you remove the heat sync? Absolutely you must replace it, and do it properly. 60+ degrees is well on the hot side, and I would have expected you might even get crashes running SETI work? If not, you are lucky, but I would look at the cooling. If you don't know how to do the heat transfer materials, get an expert in to do it, as it's very important. Can't be overstated really. Do you know what temps you had on the old board? If you don't have a case fan try adding one (or two!), firstly as an exhaust, then maybe add one as an intake if still not cool enough. Make sure the drive cables etc are tidily routed and not stopping air flow to the CPU cooler. You can sometimes get back 5c just by clipping them out of the way! If you have a stock AMD cooler in a "standard" sort of case, I would expect an upper temperature of no worse than 55c. Is this a problem, or is the alarm just set to low? Bordering on a problem, as above. Finally I am thinking about adding a second 512 MB RAM (PC2700). I read something about some sort of memory interleave or something that was supposed to increase system performance. Does anyone know anything about this? AFAIK you can run the RAM in dual channel mode on your board which would give some gain in performance. Don't get hung up about that though, as you seem to have a huge I/O bottleneck somewhere else, clearing which will speed up your system massively anyway. I would really like to get another year or so out of the system. Any help would be greatly appreciated. --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 0524-5, 17/06/2005 Tested on: 17/06/2005 20:55:35 avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2005 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#3
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Thanks for the feedback...
I realize that there may be a few things working together. I am fairly certain that it is not a spyware issue, but since the new MB uses new drivers... I have gone to the Gigabyte support site and installed the latest drivers and flashed the latest BIOS. I have no idea about the temperature on the old motherboard, but I had hardware monitoring on and never got any alarms. As I said the case is the same, but I now have 2 HDs and that might be putting some extra heat into the case. Also the fan on the new power supply might be slower than the old one. I know about cables, I had a friend who burnt up his CPU when a ribbon cable blocked one side of his heat sync! I think I am going to go get some heat sync compound and an auxiliary case fan just to be safe. As far as the drive, this is reported in the device manager, and DMA is on. The problem drive has a much higher burst speed (84.0 MB/Sec), but the sustained speed is horrible. I am sure this is a big contributing factor to slow load times and sluggish performance. I mean I watch how much drive activity I have when I am doing common tasks. The slow drive has got to be hurting me. Based on your comments about ATA vs. SATA, which is want I suspected, I am going to just get another Maxtor ATA drive. I saw a 120 GB drive for about $80 at Best Buy... This is nothing against WD, because my wife's system, which is my old system, has a WD and it is almost twice as fast as my problem drive. It is a little slower than my Maxtor, but is is also much older. I am mostly staying with Maxtor to eliminate family compatibility problems between the Pri Master/Slave. Now for the RAM. I really want to go up to 1 GB. I can do this by just adding another 512 MB of PC2700, or by removing the PC2700 and getting 2 sticks of PC3200. I would probably try to sell the old PC2700 for half price or something, but do you think I will realistically see any significant performance gain by going to PC3200? Thanks again for the feedback. |
#4
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Now for the RAM. I really want to go up to 1 GB. I can do this by just adding another 512 MB of PC2700, or by removing the PC2700 and getting 2 sticks of PC3200. I would probably try to sell the old PC2700 for half price or something, but do you think I will realistically see any significant performance gain by going to PC3200? Thanks again for the feedback. I would just add another stick of 2700 as I believe that 3200 does not come into it's own unless you use a 400 MHz bus CPU. Anyone care to verify that? --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 0524-5, 17/06/2005 Tested on: 18/06/2005 01:17:56 avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2005 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#5
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OK, I upgraded the drive and added another 512 MB of PC2700. All I can
say is WOW! Since it was the easiest, I put the RAM in first and there was no precipitable performance increase. In fact in benchmark tests, there may have been a very slight performance decrease in some of the memory tests. In any event the difference was negligible. Next I replaced the hard drive, and this really mad a BIG difference. The system boots quicker, apps load quicker and I mean a lot quicker. I would not have believed the difference if I had not seen it for myself. In some bench mark tests, the new drive is 4 to 5 times faster than the old drive. I am not seeing an overall increase anywhere near this, but for example, my Delphi 2005, which is probably my slowest loading application, it loads in just under half the time. I also redid the heat sync compound and my CPU, which was running at a warm 61-62 degrees, is now running at a more comfortable 56-58 degrees. In summary, make sure your system drive is fast! |
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