- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,570
- 10,202
- 126
I did so, a few days ago, because I wanted to re-format my desktop, possibly in prep for selling it off.
Anyways, while I was re-installing drivers after installing Win7 64-bit, during some of the driver .ZIP file extracts, it said my data rate was in KB/sec, not even MB/sec.
I know that on my Brix J1900 units, with Intel 320 300GB SSDs, I was getting like 10MB/sec for extract speeds.
I did a benchmark with CDM on the SM951 after installing things, and it mostly seemed OK, although the 4K random writes QD32 were a tad low compared to what I had benchmarked during the prior install of Win7 64-bit.
Then I remembered something that I had read about NOT doing a "Secure Erase" on the SM951, for whatever reason.
I did some web searching, and in one review that I read, it had a mention that one of the distributors of these OEM drives, RAMCity, made mention to NOT SE these drives, lest they become "bricked".
Now I'm wondering, if perhaps there is a firmware bug, regarding their SLC write cache, and the SE procedure. What if the SE code, resets the entire drive, and doesn't properly set up the SLC cache region of the drive again properly? At least, that's the stab-in-the-dark guess at what happened, why write speeds seem to be slightly down.
Hellhammer, can you comment on this issue? Is it in fact not recommended to SE a SM951?
Anyways, while I was re-installing drivers after installing Win7 64-bit, during some of the driver .ZIP file extracts, it said my data rate was in KB/sec, not even MB/sec.
I know that on my Brix J1900 units, with Intel 320 300GB SSDs, I was getting like 10MB/sec for extract speeds.
I did a benchmark with CDM on the SM951 after installing things, and it mostly seemed OK, although the 4K random writes QD32 were a tad low compared to what I had benchmarked during the prior install of Win7 64-bit.
Then I remembered something that I had read about NOT doing a "Secure Erase" on the SM951, for whatever reason.
I did some web searching, and in one review that I read, it had a mention that one of the distributors of these OEM drives, RAMCity, made mention to NOT SE these drives, lest they become "bricked".
Now I'm wondering, if perhaps there is a firmware bug, regarding their SLC write cache, and the SE procedure. What if the SE code, resets the entire drive, and doesn't properly set up the SLC cache region of the drive again properly? At least, that's the stab-in-the-dark guess at what happened, why write speeds seem to be slightly down.
Hellhammer, can you comment on this issue? Is it in fact not recommended to SE a SM951?