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Upgrading to SSD; current system has a conventional HD and a little mSATA SSD

Banana

Diamond Member
My current system has a conventional 500GB drive and a 32GB SSD mSATA cache drive (Dell XPS laptop). I want to replace the conventional drive with an SSD.

My system shows the C: drive with ~200GB of stuff in it. There is also an E: drive which I assume is the 32GB SSD.

My plan is to clone the C: drive without having to reinstall anything. My questions are - Is there anything on the E: drive (the 32GB SSD) that I need to copy? And after I replace the conventional drive with the large SSD, what is the role of the little cache drive?
 
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I thought, that with Intel's SRT technology, that the cache drive didn't show up as a separate drive letter. I believe that it treats the two drives like a specialized RAID-0 array, and there is only one drive letter.

I would do some further investigation as to what your E-colon drive is. (Card reader, perhaps?)
 
I thought, that with Intel's SRT technology, that the cache drive didn't show up as a separate drive letter. I believe that it treats the two drives like a specialized RAID-0 array, and there is only one drive letter.

This. Something isn't right with his iRST setup if this is the case. It's easy enough to see - just open the RST app from the system tray and see if the 32GB is showing as a RAID0 cache volume and the SATA HDD is accelerated.
 
I suppose that your laptop may have been mis-configured at the factory. Before changing anything, make sure you have a bootable installation media for a fresh installation of the operating system, plus a copy of the product key. The mSATA drive should have been configured as the c: boot drive, not as a secondary storage drive. Configured correctly, your laptop may then be speedy enough so that no hardware upgrade would provide all that much benefit.
 
Thanks for the replies - I'm being led down a different road altogether! I opened the Intel RST app and the usage for the mSATA SSD was "Available." I changed it to "Spare" and after doing that, the E: drive no longer shows up. All I see now is the C: drive.

Here's what I see in iRST:
<image>
How do I know if acceleration is enabled? Does the absence of an Accelerate button in the iRST toolbar indicate that acceleration is active?

"little mSATA SSD" is cute but it is not a viable technical term.

😎
It was effective in conveying my skill level. 😀
 
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