Does WinXP SP1 start to support UDMA 6?

Tseng

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Oct 9, 1999
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I have a KT333 and Maxtor 40G ATA/133. Does WinXP SP1 support ATA/133?
TIA
 

Nothinman

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Sep 14, 2001
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Since you've only got a 40G drive it doesn't really matter, the speed increases are negiligable. The only real usefull feature of ATA/133 is the change to 48-bit LBA addresses for larger drives.
 

Tseng

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Oct 9, 1999
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I have confirmed that WinXP SP1 does support ATA/133. The information showed under Primary IDE channel is Ultra DMA Mode 6.
 

VirtualLarry

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Aug 25, 2001
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Originally posted by: Nothinman
Since you've only got a 40G drive it doesn't really matter, the speed increases are negiligable. The only real usefull feature of ATA/133 is the change to 48-bit LBA addresses for larger drives.

Once again, the speed of ATA133/UDMA mode 6, has nothing to do with the support for 48-bit LBA addressing. They are independent features. In fact, the software drivers for my older Promise Ultra66 PCI IDE controller, which only supports up to UDMA mode 4 (ATA66), supports 48-bit addressing with the new Promise Ultra family 2.0.0.29 driver set.
 

Nothinman

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Sep 14, 2001
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Once again, the speed of ATA133/UDMA mode 6, has nothing to do with the support for 48-bit LBA addressing

I know they're seperate, but usually they're sold/marketed together.

In fact, the software drivers for my older Promise Ultra66 PCI IDE controller, which only supports up to UDMA mode 4 (ATA66), supports 48-bit addressing with the new Promise Ultra family 2.0.0.29 driver set.

Wouldn't require a firmware update also?
 

VirtualLarry

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Aug 25, 2001
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Originally posted by: Nothinman
Once again, the speed of ATA133/UDMA mode 6, has nothing to do with the support for 48-bit LBA addressing

I know they're seperate, but usually they're sold/marketed together.

In fact, the software drivers for my older Promise Ultra66 PCI IDE controller, which only supports up to UDMA mode 4 (ATA66), supports 48-bit addressing with the new Promise Ultra family 2.0.0.29 driver set.

Wouldn't require a firmware update also?

Yes, if the boot drive requires 48-bit LBA support. Same deal as running a larger-than 8GB HD, the BIOS needs to support extended Int13h calls if that is the boot drive, otherwise Windows will take it from there as it boots.