Hack #61. Kick It Up a Notch with Serial ATA

Upgrading to Serial ATA will stomp all over UDMA-5's 133 MBps performance.

Disk drives using the new Serial ATA (SATA) data interface could deliver data throughput performance enhancements 12%, 125%, and even 350% higher than today's fastest UltraIDE-133 disk drives. We won't see these phenomenal (+125-350%) improvements as long as SATA interfaces on the system board continue to use the lagging PCI bus, but some motherboards with built-in SATA interfaces provide an alternative bus for higher performance. You can get that extra 12% boost today with Serial ATA-150 adapters, like Promise Technologies's SATA150 TX4 and SATA150 TX2Plus.

Tip

Newer chipsets, such as the Intel 865PE, provide a separate data bus dedicated to faster storage devices. (For example, the 865PE provides a 150 MBps bus for Serial ATA.)

Serial ATA devices have spindle speeds and access times similar to the drives we're already used to—7,200 RPM and 8.5 milliseconds. As drive manufacturers adapt their faster 10,000 and 15,000 RPM SCSI or Fibre Channel drive products with 4.7 and 3.6 millisecond access times to SATA, we begin to see a true performance enhancement for storage on everyday desktop systems. Still, various performance tests would lead us to believe that we could already achieve a 20% performance boost in data reading by switching to SATA—an improvement worthy of serious consideration.

The best way to achieve a storage speed boost using SATA drives today is ...

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