SATA - How necessary is it?

Zarick

Senior member
Apr 20, 2002
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Is it something that SHOULD be on my next mobo or is it something I can live without for several years?
 

Zarick

Senior member
Apr 20, 2002
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umm.. Im guessing that I just dont get the anandtech board ways.
Why do people quote people and then make no statements?
 

pillage2001

Lifer
Sep 18, 2000
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Cause we don't see that as a needed option for now??

SATA is just another interface and it is not proven to be much faster than the IDE drives. The bottleneck is over at the drives itself and not the interface. Therefore, there's no need for SATA or ATA150 or higher.
 

OverVolt

Lifer
Aug 31, 2002
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Unless you do RAID0 with two WD Raptors, u can live without it. The drives are the bottleneck
 

Vegito

Diamond Member
Oct 16, 1999
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not so when some one decides not to include the 40pin ide connector one day. Then the next guy will say hey if they dont have it, we wont have it.. Eventually all you'll find on ur mobo will be 4 or more sata plugs

Just like how maxtor say 1 year warranty, and the month after, everyone drops 3 year warranty and goes to 1 year
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
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they're easier to route in your case, thats about it
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
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Originally posted by: Zarick
forceho there is already an ide to sata adapter.

and they're like $25. i don't know about you but 1/4 or 1/2 the price of a hard drive for the adapter?
 

XBoxLPU

Diamond Member
Aug 21, 2001
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Originally posted by: xerosleep
Man I don't know what reviews you guys read but SATA did extremly well and was much better than standard harddrives.

the raptor drive is the only SATA drive that has impressed me
 

pillage2001

Lifer
Sep 18, 2000
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Originally posted by: XBoxLPU
Originally posted by: xerosleep
Man I don't know what reviews you guys read but SATA did extremly well and was much better than standard harddrives.

the raptor drive is the only SATA drive that has impressed me

And that's 10k RPM which cannot be compared to other 7200RPM drives.
 

zephyrprime

Diamond Member
Feb 18, 2001
7,512
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I think you should get SATA. I basically doesn't cost anymore. Unless there's a MB model you really wanted that didn't have SATA, get SATA. All the SATA MB's have PATA too so you don't lose much.
 

Vegito

Diamond Member
Oct 16, 1999
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Originally posted by: Zarick
forceho there is already an ide to sata adapter.

yes but im saying eventually they wont even make pata drives at all. SATA will take over since its so cheap and now that intel threw it in the chipset
 

andyfasthands

Senior member
Apr 19, 2003
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Originally posted by: pillage2001
Cause we don't see that as a needed option for now??

SATA is just another interface and it is not proven to be much faster than the IDE drives. The bottleneck is over at the drives itself and not the interface. Therefore, there's no need for SATA or ATA150 or higher.

When you say the bottleneck is at the drive itself, not the interface, which part of the drive do you mean? Are you suggesting the RPMs make the difference? What else is there to think about other than interface and RPM?
 

mechBgon

Super Moderator<br>Elite Member
Oct 31, 1999
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Anyone seen any rumblings of SATA optical drives yet? Or SATA floppy drives?

Regarding the mobos, to make the enthusiast happy you'd want about six SATA jacks, minimum. And I mean native to the southbridge, not tack-on PCI-based ones. If it had no PATA ports at all, then I'd be thinking eight SATA jacks, at the rate people are adding burners, readers and high-capacity hard drives to store digital content. i875P has two native SATA jacks, and even nForce3 Pro 250 will only have three. I think you can live without SATA for a couple years still.
 

mechBgon

Super Moderator<br>Elite Member
Oct 31, 1999
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Originally posted by: andyfasthands
Originally posted by: pillage2001
Cause we don't see that as a needed option for now??

SATA is just another interface and it is not proven to be much faster than the IDE drives. The bottleneck is over at the drives itself and not the interface. Therefore, there's no need for SATA or ATA150 or higher.

When you say the bottleneck is at the drive itself, not the interface, which part of the drive do you mean? Are you suggesting the RPMs make the difference? What else is there to think about other than interface and RPM?
Putting a 0-to-200mph speedometer in a Ford Escort won't make it go 200mph, and giving a drive a 150Mb/sec interface all to itself won't make it perform better than if it were on a 133Mb/sec interface, if the drive itself tops out at ~60-70Mb/sec sustained throughput.
 

Zarick

Senior member
Apr 20, 2002
396
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Actually zephyr there is the Epox 8RDA+ that I wanted to get. Its 30 bucks cheaper that the abit board and 40 cheaper than the asus board (not a fan of asus anymore after owning two of their boards) so I wanted to know if I will be sorry I dont have it in the end.
 

billyjak

Platinum Member
Oct 9, 1999
2,869
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Like everyone said not necessary right now. Wait until SATA 2 protocoll comes and by then the SATA hardrives should be a little more mature.
 

pillage2001

Lifer
Sep 18, 2000
14,038
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Originally posted by: mechBgon
Originally posted by: andyfasthands
Originally posted by: pillage2001
Cause we don't see that as a needed option for now??

SATA is just another interface and it is not proven to be much faster than the IDE drives. The bottleneck is over at the drives itself and not the interface. Therefore, there's no need for SATA or ATA150 or higher.

When you say the bottleneck is at the drive itself, not the interface, which part of the drive do you mean? Are you suggesting the RPMs make the difference? What else is there to think about other than interface and RPM?
Putting a 0-to-200mph speedometer in a Ford Escort won't make it go 200mph, and giving a drive a 150Mb/sec interface all to itself won't make it perform better than if it were on a 133Mb/sec interface, if the drive itself tops out at ~60-70Mb/sec sustained throughput.

What he said.