Originally posted by: Lord Evermore
Even if it's not, NCQ seems to hurt performance in non-server usage from the few benchmarks I've bothered to read.
Originally posted by: Heen05
Originally posted by: Lord Evermore
Even if it's not, NCQ seems to hurt performance in non-server usage from the few benchmarks I've bothered to read.
Agreed. and you have to have a mobo that supports it--which yours does, i think.
qftOriginally posted by: Lord Evermore
Even if it's not, NCQ seems to hurt performance in non-server usage from the few benchmarks I've bothered to read.
Originally posted by: ryansebiz
Originally posted by: Heen05
Originally posted by: Lord Evermore
Even if it's not, NCQ seems to hurt performance in non-server usage from the few benchmarks I've bothered to read.
Agreed. and you have to have a mobo that supports it--which yours does, i think.
so, do i have to enable NCQ in the hard drive?
and, if so, how?
Originally posted by: sandeep108
I do not know any benchmarks but I have a samsung HD160JJ and turning off NCQ (advised for earlier versions of nForce IDE drivers) in the driver properties impacts performance quite adversely. I leave NCQ on.
I believe that several maxtor drives had problems with NCQ/Sata-2 with nForce 4 chipsets. I read somewhere that Maxtor has just released new firmware to fix their HDDs. Ask Maxtor support or search their site for it.
I read somewhere that Maxtor has just released new firmware to fix their HDDs. Ask Maxtor support or search their site for it.
Maxtor has released new firmware to fix an issue with nForce 4 chipsets and their SATA II drives.
Note: This solution is only to be applied to the listed products and only when used with the nForce4 chipset. If you are unsure as to which chipset you have, contact your motherboard manufacturer or visit your motherboard manufacturer's website for clarification.
The drives affected are those with model numbers starting with:
# 6V- (DiamondMax 10)
# 6H- (DiamondMax 11)
# 7V- (Maxline III)
# 7H- (MaxLine Pro 500)
A firmware upgrade to resolve these issues for Maxtor SATA II drives is available by contacting Maxtor Support. Please have the drive serial number and the Code number available, which will be listed on the top label of the drive itself.
Fortunately with my Samsung the reverse seems true...🙂Personally I would leave NCQ disabled,I notice with my Maxtor it takes a lot longer to boot up with NCQ enabled on my nForce 4 Ultra board.
Originally posted by: sandeep108
Fortunately with my Samsung the reverse seems true...🙂Personally I would leave NCQ disabled,I notice with my Maxtor it takes a lot longer to boot up with NCQ enabled on my nForce 4 Ultra board.
Originally posted by: sandeep108
Proof? Update your firmware and try it out for yourself.
I tried it out for myself by enabling / disabling ncq in device manager>ide controller properties. I found boot-up, response and I/O noticeably slower with NCQ disabled. I do not remember the results now but even the speed test results showed a drop with NCQ unchecked. I have not tried M$ drivers at all so I would not be able to comment.
I did read at AT that ncq did help sometimes but overall for desktop use, it did not really matter. Since I was having intermittent HDD device paging errors on boot-up with 6.53 and 6.66 drivers, I tried enabling/disabling ncq to see if it did resolve the issue. I did not have any other problem at all. At that time I found that disabling ncq on my system noticeably hampered performance and since I was only having the error at boot-up and that too intermittently, I chose to live with the error rather than disable ncq.
With the 6.70 drivers I have not had the HDD device paging error since 2-3 months now with ncq enabled.
There was a long article somewhere on the nForce4 Sata-2 and Maxtor HDDs and I do recall that it was concluded that Maxtor did not correctly implement the Sata-2/ncq standard, though they got it working correctly for Intel chipsets. Try updating your Maxtor firmware. I am sure this will resolve your device paging errors at boot-up.