Possibly. My motherboard is only SATA II, 3GB/s.
Your REVO is plugged into a PCI-e slot, correct?
This is the thread that details the issues. Reports of stuttering, halved speed. Possibly dependent on which controller you use.
Why are all the TRIM utilities different? Aren't there any specifications or standards that everone is supposed to follow?
The crucial forum has post that have owners complaining that their SSDs won't work correctly with the controller chip on their motherboard. What's up with that? No standards?
I've seen lifetime endurance figures of 30TB of writes bandied around for the latest generation of MLC drives.
TRIM is a standard ATA command, so it's the same for all drives. But Windows reserves hardware control for itself, so circumventing that (in Windows XP) can be a challenge. In Windows 7, the utilities are simply creating a large file and deleting it, which prompts Windows to issue a TRIM command.
If the Trim command is a standard, why doesn't Intels toolbox work on a Crucial SSD?
I've trawled those forums and didn't find anything that really worried me - unless I was an Apple owner, in which case I'm screwed by Apple's consistently poor adherence to industry standards. Do you have any examples? I may have been looking at it through rose colored glasses.
Bozo said:If the Trim command is a standard, why doesn't Intels toolbox work on a Crucial SSD?
I attached one SSD to the 9650se. Then ran AS SSD benchmark. The speeds were one third of what they were before I attached the SSD to the 9650se.
I need a new controller
Yeah, that bugs me. It's called "idle time garbage collection" for a reason. I suppose it's a good indicator for busy server use, but a desktop is going to have idle disks 90% of the time... plenty of time for these modern controllers to clean things up.I'm not sure that I still believe in the need for TRIM, because I suspect idle garbage collection is sufficient in most real world situations (not sure about Sandforce though). Anand hammered a C300 with writes, waited just 3 hours, then retested. Unsurprisingly, it had only recovered slightly. :roll: