The SSD isnt' going to make the slow C7 processor go any faster....
So my new 60G OCZ Summit came in and I installed Windows 7 Tiny Edition Rev01. After fiddling around with it for a day, I still kept having hibernation problems (blank screen on resume) and the touchscreen not working after resume. So screw it, I just did a clone of my previous (reliable) Windows XP SP3 install which was installed on my 80GB Seagate EE25 Extreme Environment drive using XXClone.
Admittedly, boot times are a bit quicker. The Windows XP loading progress bar goes by much quicker, and the desktop is faster to load. But the time it takes for Centrafuse to start up is practically the same. As for hibernation, going into and coming out of hibernation is practically the same as my old 80GB EE25.
My motherboard is a Jetway J7F2WE2G, with SATA 150. I did some quick benchmarks, and admittedly, the OCZ is a bit faster. Sequential read/write was about 45MB/s on my EE25 and 125MB/s on the OCZ. I seen some benchmarks where people have gotten 200MB/s on the OCZ, any ideas what I can try to bump up the speed? Ive already got write caching enabled in device manager.
So yea, basically, according to benchmarks the OCZ SSD is much faster, but in real life application (mostly hibernation), Im not noticing anything significant. Tips, advice?
I use ewfmgr to cache all writes on my 120GB OCZ Apex (raid 0, 230MB/sec on reads) to keep the drive running at maximum speed on my notebook. If I turn off ewfmgr the SSD drive slows down significantly and operates about the same as a regular HD again.
My boot time was reduced significantly when I have ewfmgr turned on, but then again that's not important if you're using hibernate.
Speeding up your drive is only part of making your computer go faster. Sounds like you're getting the benefits of a faster drive. The rest (Centrafuse startup time) is probably related to the speed and architecture of the system.
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why didn't you get the vertex (almost the same price). I benched mine at 200 something MB/s.
Hibernation times depends on your bios or your windows startup.
If your POST takes a while, then turn off unneeded stuff on bios (LAN,serial...etc)
If your windows logo takes a while, then use bootvis to see which component (services/driver) takes the longest, then turn it off if possible.
The Vertex and Summit are almost equivalent, but I got the summit because it was on sale for $140 canadian shipped. What I meant by hibernation times were almost equivalent was that the progress bar for resume from hibernation was basically identical with the SSD and HDD.
i noticed in my own experience that resume time is as ram/mobo/components dependent as it is hard drive dependent. I doubt its your ram since you only got 512mb.
Turn off useless stuff from your bios because that'll not only reduce your bios time, it reduces the windows resume time because there's no driver to be loaded.
Certain components mostly usb, causes your computer to take forever to resume. so external HD/Usb sticks....etc should be checked to see if they slow down your resume time.
has anyone looked at the read/write speeds of SSD's? theyre slower if not vaugely equal to ATA100 speeds unless you shell out 100's of dollars... and for the price, i'd rather just get a 6 pack of SATA300 drives for about the same price as a decent SSD...
my suggestion would be use a SATA laptop drive for pagefile usage and use the SSD for just file/os storage... the slower speeds of the SSD might be the key... but ive never ran the win7 tiny edition either which im guessing has a 'no' page file option?
its not the speed of ssd that most of us are after. Its really the 0 seek time, for faster boots, and the shock/temp tolerance.
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