Expertester

July 24, 2008

AHCI vs IDE – Benchmark & Advantage

Filed under: Hardware — expertester @ 9:14 am
Tags: , , , ,

Recently, more and more user start to notice (note : not enthausiast) their main board or notebook has AHCI, instead of IDE (or legacy IDE). Most of us already aware what is IDE but what the heck is AHCI? What advantage could be gain from AHCI? Is AHCI is future thing of good old IDE interface. Will it slow down my system? Will it conflict my system?

What is AHCI ?

AHCI stand for Advance Host Controller Interface. AHCI is a hardware mechanism that allows software to communicate with Serial ATA (SATA) devices (such as host bus adapters) that are designed to offer features not offered by Parallel ATA (PATA) controllers, such as hot-plugging and native command queuing (NCQ). The specification details a system memory structure for computer hardware vendors in order to transfer data between system memory and the device.

Many SATA controllers can enable AHCI either separately or in conjunction with RAID support. Intel recommends choosing RAID mode on their motherboards (which also enables AHCI) rather than the plain AHCI/SATA mode for maximum flexibility, due to the issues caused when the mode is switched once an operating system has already been installed.

AHCI is fully supported out of the box for Microsoft Windows Vista and the Linux operating system from kernel 2.6.19. NetBSD also supports drivers in AHCI mode out of the box in certain versions. Older operating systems require drivers written by the host bus adapter vendor in order to support AHCI.

Advantage of AHCI

  1. Hot-Plugging (will not cover here as it will not affect computer performance)
  2. Native Command Queuing (might improve computer/system/hard disk responsiveness, espcially in multi-tasking environment

Will it slow down my computer

Several websites claim, NCQ (one of AHCI component) will cause performance degradation in single threaded benchmark, but other author claim otherwise. Let put our think hat here.

Their claims might correct at certain extent, but it is hard to prove that those single threaded benchmark will reflect real world application. Nowadays, hard disk is the slowest component in any modern PC (except we are using SSD). Antivirus, firewall, anti-spyware, windows update, background defragmentation, indexing (search), user applications (firefox, word, media player) ; all contribute to super multi-tasking, which I believe NCQ (AHCI) will show it advantage. So, in order to have better understanding on how NCQ (AHCI) could improve system responsiveness, let see what is NCQ actually is.

So, what is NCQ?

In principle, Native Command Queuing is relatively simple. It allows the drive to execute write /read commands that are transmitted randomly in order to optimise the movement of the reading head.



Speed is increased but there is also an impact on power consumption and noise level which is reduced. Of course, applications don’t have to work simultaneously and don’t have to wait for the previous result to send the next command. This of course isn’t always possible. Another possibility in using NCQ is multitasking in the case where you run two very heavy applications simultaneously from the drive point of view.

To better explain this situation, imagine an elevator, in which two people enter simultaneously on the ground floor. The first pushes the 12th floor button and the second the 2nd floor. It would be counterproductive to go to the 12th floor and then to the 2nd floor. The principle of NCQ was already in the ATA norm since 1997 with TCQ (Tagged Command Queuing). This heavier protocol could sometimes lead to significant performance losses in the case of low loads (no or very little command reorganisation to do) and has been integrated in a limited number of controllers. Hitachi supports it on 7K250 drives, like Western and the Raptor WD740GD, while on the chipset side, we can count on NVIDIA but not Intel.

SATA 3.0 Gbits /s defines a new speed of data transmission for the Serial ATA interface. Initially, SATA reached up to 1.5 Gbits /s, which really corresponds to 150 mega-octets per second as 20% of information is dedicated to error correction. The transfer rate is now increased to 300 MB/s but we have to keep in mind that this is the interface speed. It has nothing to do with disc speed alone. At most, cache speed would be affected.

For NCQ to be enabled, it must be supported and turned on in the SATA host bus adapter and in the hard drive itself. The appropriate driver must be loaded into the operating system to enable NCQ on the host bus adapter. Many newer chipsets support the Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI), which should allow a generic driver supplied by the operating system to control them and enable NCQ. In fact, newer mainstream Linux kernels support AHCI natively. Unfortunately, Windows XP requires the installation of a vendor-specific driver even if AHCI is present on the host bus adapter. Windows Vista corrects this situation by including a generic AHCI driver.

Benchmark Time J

Note : Intel and nVidia Standard mean these hard disk were benchmark using Intel and nVidia chipset without AHCI technology. Intel AHCI and nVidia Driver mean these hard disk were benchmark with AHCI turned on.

We start with a performance index based on figures obtained with the « XP Startup », « Application Loading » and « General Usage » profiles of PC Mark 2005.



The first thing to notice is that all drives benefit from the change to AHCI or the installation of NVIDIA’s driver. These two parameters allow the activation of NCQ…even for Western drives that do not support this functionality! With Intel’s platform, the most important gains due to AHCI are noted with the Samsung, Maxtor and Seagate drives. With NVIDIA it’s mainly the Raptor 150 GB and Samsung. For Maxtor and Hitachi, however, they are just noticeable.

If you focus just on drive performances, the Western SE16 dominates followed by Hitachi. Seagate ends up last behind Samsung.

Perfs – file copy

Performances – file copying

The next test is file copying. We measured reading, writing, and also the copy of the following files on hard drives: 2 big files for a total of 4.4 GB, plus 2620 files which total 2 GB, and finally 16046 files which weighs 733 MB. The source or target for reading or writing on the disc are two Raptor 74 GB in RAID which are capable of ensuring a transfer rate of 110 MB/s without restrictions.

This type of information is uninteresting of course because if the sequential transfer rate gives an idea of performances during the copy of big files, things will be different with small files. We copied the files in two different ways: whiting the same partition in the beginning of the disc and from this partition to a second one that begins at the middle of the disc.



First surprise, for unknown reasons the activation of AHCI on the installation of NVIDIA drivers notably reduces some of the reading performances: it is the case of the Raptor 150 GB in AHCI and the Seagate and Maxtor drives with NVIDIA’s drivers. These two use Agere controllers. Only the Western SE/SE16 really benefit from the modification which is in fact the installation of NVIDIA’s drivers. Except for these cases we noted that the Maxtor and Samsung provide the best transfer rates here whereas Western and Seagate are the slowest.



For writing however, AHCI/Driver NVIDIA gains are significant except for Seagate and Hitachi’s drive with NVIDIA’s platform. We noted the excellent performances of Samsung’s drive and the opposite for the Maxtor, which was really good for reading. Fortunately, gains obtained by the AHCI and NVIDIA’s drivers for this disc compensate for this.




Whether it’s for close or far copy, one drive is here very surprising when used with an AHCI controller. The Samsung drive is much faster than a Raptor and 30% ahead of the closest 7200 Rpm competitor. We made several tests to confirm these results and we always obtained the same figures. The other surprise was the performance drop recorded on the Maxtor with NVIDIA’s drivers.
We also noted that a better access time doesn’t guaranty better performances for extended copies, because Hitachi’s performance reduction is more significant with a close copy than other discs. Except for Samsung and the Raptor, it’s the Western SE16 which is the fastest here.

Perfs – IOmeter per platform

Performances – IOmeter per platform

IOMeter is used to simulate a load in a multi-user environment. It’s a load type file server comprised of 80% reading and 20% writing, which is 100% randomly accessed on the disc. In this case, the NCQ can be particularly useful. We tested the IOMeter with a number of concurrent commands from 1 to 128 and of course for a single command, the NCQ doesn’t bring any improvements. The performance gap with the Raptor is much more significant, because this drive is particularly well suited to this type of use.

As the volume of data is rather significant we decided to represent it first per platform then below per drive with and without activation of the AAM on Intel’s platform.



For Intel and without AHCI, Western drives are ahead whatever the number of simultaneous accesses. Seagate is very close but loses ground beyond 16 accesses, even though the Hitachi and Samsung are relatively close. The Maxtor’s performances are clearly lower, however, despite a gap that tends to diminish as the load increases.



The activation of AHCI changes things. The Maxtor drive sees its performances increasing from 2 concurrent accesses to come in first (except of course for the Raptor). Maxtor can say thank you to NCQ. If Seagate also benefits from the NCQ, it isn’t really the case for Hitachi. Of course, it doesn’t change the Western SE/S16’s performances, because it simply doesn’t support this function. However, this doesn’t prevent them from reaching very high performances.



Without NVIDIA’s drivers, performances with NVIDIA’s platform are relatively similar to those obtained with Intel.



With NVIDIA’s drivers, the situation is different, because the NCQ really seems to work with 8 concurrent accesses and above. This is quite a lot and it doesn’t often happen in the case of a single user. Maxtor’s drive is strongly impacted even if it doesn’t stop it from being in the lead with 128 accesses (5% faster than with Intel’s platform).

Perfs – IOmeter per disc & AAM

Performances – IOMeter per drive & AAM

Here are now performances obtained per disc. In addition we added results obtained with AAM (Automatic Acoustic Management) activated on Intel’s platform.



For Hitachi, the NCQ doesn’t bring much whether it’s on an NVIDIA or Intel platform. We noted that with this type of access the AAM strongly reduces performances. The gap tends to reduce with the increase in number of simultaneous accesses.



We noticed with Maxtor’s drive that if NCQ based performance gains are visible from the start on the Intel platform, they only appear beyond 8 concurrent accesses on the nForce. It then immediately catches up and even results are even better. It’s rather unfortunate however, because in practice this type of drive will be of use for personal computers or with a limited amount of concurrent accesses. Here we can easily see the benefit of the NCQ to counter the negative effect of the AAM as from 4 simultaneous accesses the NCQ compensates completely.



Like with Samsung’s drive it is only from 16 concurrent accesses that the interest of NCQ is noticeable. Performances from this figure are much higher however than the one obtained with Intel’s platform. We noted that the activation of AAM leads to less significant performance reductions than with the Hitachi or Maxtor in this area.



With Seagate’s drive it isn’t possible to activate the AAM, which isn’t too critical. Once again, we have to wait until more than 8 accesses for the nForce NCQ to bring performance gains.




NCQ isn’t on the two Western drives and this is the reason why performances are similar between NVIDIA and Intel with or without AHCI / Driver. Once more we noted that even without NCQ, the gap due to the AAM tends to diminish with the increase of the number of concurrent accesses.



Here now is the Raptor 150 GB, which is in a totally different league except for NVIDIA’s NCQ performances.

Perfs – Perfs index & files with AAM

Performances – Applicative index & file copy with AAM

If performances with the IOMeter are strongly affected by AAM activation (because of the 100% random nature of disc accesses) we should take a look at the level of performances in less extreme situations.



As you can see, the performance drop is almost invisible on the Hitachi and isn’t huge on the Maxtor and Samsung. It’s greater for Western Digital. The Seagate 7200.10 doesn’t allow the user to modify the noise level whereas its adjustment with the Raptor doesn’t change anything.




We could have expected such a result. Whether it’s with reading or writing, performances don’t change much with or without noise management as heads don’t have to move a lot.




For copying the performance loss is notable for some of the discs such as the Western and slightly so with the Samsung. Hitachi and Maxtor’s performances remain almost unchanged. At times we even recorded a slight performance increase but this is most likely a testing error.

Warning (Potential Problem with AHCI)

Common problems switching to AHCI under Windows :

  • Enabling AHCI in a system BIOS will cause a 0×7B Blue Screen of Death STOP error (INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE) on installations of Windows XP where AHCI/RAID drivers for that system’s chipset are not installed. Switching to AHCI mode requires installing new drivers before changing the BIOS settings.
  • For Intel chipsets (for example, Intel ICH9) drivers are available from either an OEM board or computer manufacturer. For the Intel versions, the driver must be loaded before loading the OS (by pressing F6 as setup starts).The Intel drivers will work for both XP and Vista. Also, in the case of ICH9, an unsupported method to enable AHCI on ICH9 is available.
  • When attempting to install Microsoft Windows XP or a previous version on an AHCI-enabled system will cause the setup to fail with the error message “set up could not detect hard disk drive…”. This problem can only be corrected by either using a floppy disk with the appropriate drivers, by slipstreaming the appropriate drivers into the Windows XP installation CD or by turning on IDE emulation in the BIOS settings if available (usually called as COMPATABILITY or ACPI).
  • Enabling AHCI in a system BIOS with Windows Vista already installed will result in a BSoD if SATA has been running in IDE mode during Vista’s installation. Before enabling AHCI in the BIOS, users must first follow the instructions found at Microsoft Knowledge Base article 922976.
  • Enabling AHCI in a system BIOS on installations of Windows XP or Windows Vista will cause SATA Optical drives to disappear. A Hotfix for Windows Vista is available under the title: “SATA optical drives are not available after you start a Windows Vista-based computer.” This problem is also fixed in Vista SP1.

Common problems switching to AHCI under Linux :

  • AHCI controller does not work on AMD/ATI RS400-200 and RS480 HBA when MSI is enabled due to a hardware error. In order for AHCI to work users must provide the “pci=nomsi” kernel boot parameter. With MSI disabled in this way, the PCIe bus can only act as a faster PCI bus with hotplug capabilities. This is also true of the Nvidia nForce 560 chipset.
  • AHCI controller on AMD/ATI SB600 HBA can’t do 64-bit DMA transfers. 64-bit addressing is optional in AHCI 1.1 and the chip claims it can do them, but in reality it can’t, so it is disabled. After that it will be forced to do 32-bit DMA transfers. Thus DMA transfers will occur in the lower 4 GiB region of the memory, and bounce buffers must be used sometimes if there is more than 4 GiB of RAM.

Verdict :

These extensive benchmarks clearly show to us, AHCI (NCQ) definitely could improve computer system responsiveness, transfer rate, number of IO per second and the list goes on. Enough to say, it will make your hard disk more efficient (and indirectly reduce it wear and tear). Notice that, not every hard disk with NCQ turn on could provide positive performance gain at every single benchmark. I believe this phenomenon explain why certain author claim NCQ improve their benchmark score while others don’t.

As for Acer 4530, I realize, AHCI or NCQ improve my system (Vista) responsiveness espcially when I am using VMWare Server (with 2 Suse Linux Enterprise Guest System running on top). Background activity such as anti-virus, spyware, defrag or event torrenting seem lighter than before (IDE). For the record, my Acer 4530 use Seagate SATA 300 with NCQ mobile hard disk.

My personal recommendation, turn on AHCI if your system permit you to do so. For Vista user, you can turn AHCI support without reformat your system. What you need to do is, enable Vista standard AHCI driver (provided you install Vista in IDE mode, so AHCI driver is not activated) using regedit. Detail : Read Here

Credit : Wikipedia, BeHardware.com, Me

36 Comments »

  1. Excellent article. This contains everything I wanted to know about it.

    Thank You very much.

    Comment by Neel — July 26, 2008 @ 6:18 pm | Reply

  2. No problem Neel…

    I was in the same shoes as yours..wondering about AHCI before.

    Comment by expertester — July 26, 2008 @ 11:53 pm | Reply

  3. Good article; decided to give AHCI a try with my new build; Gigabyte GA-P35-DS3L (ICH9E southbridge) and a Samsung F1 hd753lj 750Gb SATA(3.0Gb/s). Downloaded the latest Intel Matrix Storage Manager; extracted the AHCI drivers to a floppy; set AHCI mode in the BIOS; booted from a slipstreamed WinXP Pro SP3 CD and did the F6 controller pre installation from floppy; selected the right controller; setup continues from CD, but ends installation the next stage with the “Unable to detect harddisk” message as the Windows XP setup installation interface does not detect and recognize any of the hard disks mounted on S-ATA (Serial ATA) ports, and thus XP installer cannot find usable physical disks on the computer system and unable to continue to install XP, forcing me to quit by pressing F3.

    Comment by Paul — August 11, 2008 @ 9:03 am | Reply

  4. Paul :
    If your windows XP cant detect hdd under AHCI, it mean, your driver is not correct. If you already slipstream it using nLite, there is no need for F6 floppy. It is either one…

    Since you got floppy drive, you may need to check with your mobo manufacturer AHCI driver for the correct one…and directly load the driver from F6…to test which one work for you.

    Comment by expertester — August 11, 2008 @ 10:15 pm | Reply

  5. Good article; I was also unsure about advantages by changing from IDE to AHCI.
    By the way, I found in internet a very simple way to change BIOS from IDE to AHCI without new XP-Installation and it works!
    1- Go to hardware manager, click on “Intel(R)…ATA- Storage controller” that you are using with IDE and with a right maus click, driver update.
    Look for and load the right AHCI driver for your chipset.
    Turn off XP and go to Bios set-up wenn re-booting, change Bios to AHCI. Re-boot.
    XP will start, recognize new Hardware and akst to re-boot. Just do it.
    XP boot normally. Done. It worked for me, but do it on your own risk.
    After doing it, I was wondering why experts doesn’t suggest it. Maybe to sell floppy drivers?

    Comment by Normal User — August 21, 2008 @ 7:28 am | Reply

  6. [...] people’s results on this…next time I do a reformat I think I’m going to enable ACHI on my system AHCI vs IDE ? Benchmark & Advantage Expertester __________________ ASUS Maximus Formula (X38) ***** EVGA 8800GT Superclocked 512MB Intel E8400 [...]

    Pingback by Moving Up To Velociraptor - ABXZone Computer Forums — December 25, 2008 @ 3:08 am | Reply

  7. Thank you very much for this comprehensive article. It was very useful.

    Comment by Your regular guy — December 28, 2008 @ 1:23 pm | Reply

  8. you are welcome ^^

    Comment by expertester — December 30, 2008 @ 8:51 am | Reply

  9. [...] In plus, sub AHCI ai si hot swap. Iaca (pentru maniacii care n-au altceva mai bun de facut): http://expertester.wordpress.com/200…ark-advantage/ __________________ There is no one who would have me – I can’t cook. Last edited by stiller; [...]

    Pingback by Cum fac sa... v2.0 - Page 60 - Computer Games Forum — January 17, 2009 @ 4:03 pm | Reply

  10. [...] or 3, I would use it there as well. I initially added it to my present Vista build as a guess, but http://expertester.wordpress.com/200…ark-advantage/ suggests there may be validity, and in any case, the only time it "hurts" me is when I go [...]

    Pingback by Does Vista install CD (OEM Ult 32bit) have ICH10 sata drivers? | keyongtech — January 18, 2009 @ 4:42 pm | Reply

  11. Expertester, I have to say that this is a really stunning article you posted here!
    Out of most of the sites I have seen this rates as the top! I take my hat off to you as this is the type of article that one should have in the web and if only others could follow your example, it would make life so much easier for every body.

    Well done!!!!!!!!!!

    Comment by Vincent — January 29, 2009 @ 8:55 pm | Reply

  12. Articles like this make the internet invaluable

    free knowledge !!!!!! thanks !!!!!!!!

    - New Zealand

    Comment by Skat Barnett — March 4, 2009 @ 9:13 pm | Reply

  13. Excellent article! One thing to note, for those who enable AHCI, you’ll need that driver floppy disk handy to install XP. If you’re like me and don’t have a floppy drive, or just really hate to use them, check out http://www.nliteos.com. N’lite is a program written to allow you to slipstream drivers onto your XP CD. It has saved me lots of times.

    Comment by Matt — March 11, 2009 @ 6:50 pm | Reply

  14. Excellent review!… I’ve changed to AHCI some time ago and it seems to improve my overall performance. No BSoD yet… I made an AHCI fix (in a Exe file) that made the changes on the system and install the drivers … it works this way:
    while the system is still in IDE mode in winxp:
    Run the exe..
    next .. next…. reboot… change BIOS sata to AHCI. when reboot, drivers will install, and ask for reboot again… and that’s it!… AHCI Ready without problems!…
    if Anybody wants my fix, just ask for it to my mail “mick2005 at gmail”, and i be please to provide it… =)

    Note:. uses Intel Matrix Storage (8.7.0.1007) for ICH9 (it works in all latest intel chipsets…i guess )

    Greetings

    Comment by Mick — April 18, 2009 @ 12:01 pm | Reply

  15. Wow! This article was more than I expected. Actually, it was more than I could read at this time of the morning but I managed to draw the line and make a conclusion using the information in here. Thank you very much! :)

    Bookmarked!

    Comment by Nicu — April 30, 2009 @ 6:23 am | Reply

  16. About to build with Gigabyte motherboard supporting AHCI but using Western Digital Black Caviar HDD and two SATA optical drives. Looks like if I use XP Pro I should not enable AHCI or I will lose the optical drive recognition in exchange for minimal performance gain.

    Comment by Doug — May 7, 2009 @ 4:40 pm | Reply

  17. Great!! My Vostro 1500 is now the fastest machine in the house. The boot time is half of what it eas time with IDE. I just can’t believe such a simple process can make this hugh change on my vostro performance.
    Thanks!

    Comment by davidh5551 — May 24, 2009 @ 4:37 pm | Reply

  18. Great!! My Vostro 1500 is now the fastest machine in the house. The boot time is half of what it was with IDE. I just can’t believe such a simple process can make this hugh change on my vostro performance.
    Thanks!

    Comment by davidh5551 — May 24, 2009 @ 4:38 pm | Reply

  19. Thanks for the info on AHCI. It was helpful.

    The problem I have with AHCI is that using certain programs don’t work now, mainly utilities.
    Programs like Paragon Total Defrag which requires to boot your system and at boot up it goes to the windows logo screen and then black screen then a quick BSoD and reboots.

    Any suggestions on how to get around this. I’ve had the same issue using Acronis’s sofware.

    Comment by Trevor — June 15, 2009 @ 11:56 pm | Reply

  20. Trevor, I think you should address this issue to the software manufacturers. If I’m not wrong, it’s up to the software that boots-up to load the appropriate drivers. In this case, the software is the operating system itself.

    In these defrag tools’ cases, it looks like they are not using/loading the AHCI drivers so they crash the system. I’m 99,9% sure this is related to software issues in the defraggers, not the OS nor the AHCI drivers, that why you should report this to Paragon & Acronis.

    My only suggestion is to try the latest available versions of their software. If you already did that, I guess there’s nothing else to do except for sending them a bug report/missing feature letter.

    Maybe other defragmentation tools work with AHCI but I haven’t tried any yet. I can only say good luck with that! :)

    Comment by Nicu — June 16, 2009 @ 12:14 pm | Reply

  21. Thank’s for the great info ;)

    Comment by Osi — June 20, 2009 @ 8:59 am | Reply

  22. very well done, and the only comprehensive article about AHCI I’d really recommend.
    Thank you!

    Comment by Kenobi — June 21, 2009 @ 11:58 am | Reply

  23. TREVOR… I had the same problem, but what i do when use boot-time apps.. is change the bios back to the IDE mode, make the changes you need and turn it back to AHCI…

    but is like NICU said.. it’s a software related issue.

    Note: once the fix has been aplied, you can boot XP in both (IDE & AHCI) modes.

    Comment by Mick — June 21, 2009 @ 9:35 pm | Reply

  24. thanks for the article, cleared up a lot of things, great research work.

    Comment by brunoz — June 22, 2009 @ 1:27 pm | Reply

  25. Thanks guys…glad it help.

    Comment by expertester — June 27, 2009 @ 8:55 am | Reply

  26. [...] expertester.wordpress.com [...]

    Pingback by SATA modes explored: AHCI vs. IDE | pwn3d — July 21, 2009 @ 11:52 pm | Reply

  27. Great article, it is apparent that you put a lot of time and effort into it.

    :: RAISES DRINK ::

    Comment by Richard — August 27, 2009 @ 10:43 pm | Reply

  28. Great article, thanks.
    I just purchased an ASUS 1005HA with German XP installed and wanted to change to English. I inserted disk in external optical drive and quickly realised I could not install if I left AHCI enabled in the bios so I disabled it and enabled IDE and the installation ran smooth, all drivers OK and system is ok. When installing XP I also had to disable “fast boot” and as well as the “AHCI” in bios.
    Now my pc is running in IDE mode, my questions are; is it worth slip streaming XP with the original AHCI files I have and reinstalling everything again? Will I benefit?
    Is the system compromised if I leave it as it is? And can anyone point me in the right direction on how to slipstream the AHCI drivers with my existing XP?, Thanks, Trevor2

    Comment by Trevor2 — September 7, 2009 @ 3:29 pm | Reply

  29. If you need to slip stream and reinstall your fresh install windows, I believe it is totally not worth. The benefit is so insignificant. Mind you that you may get negative impact as well.

    Comment by expertester — September 8, 2009 @ 10:01 am | Reply

  30. [...] Re: Legacy IDE, Native IDE, AHCI and RAID?? Check this out. AHCI vs IDE – Benchmark & Advantage [...]

    Pingback by Legacy IDE, Native IDE, AHCI and RAID?? - TechEnclave — September 22, 2009 @ 1:19 am | Reply

  31. [...] http://expertester.wordpress.com/200…ark-advantage/ ..a __________________ So you think hot air rises? Think again! ..a? Just how I sign my posts (Andy) Quote: [...]

    Pingback by New HDD: Samsung F1 HD103UJ hd-tune 2.55 bench is it okay? - Overclock.net - Overclocking.net — October 9, 2009 @ 12:05 am | Reply

  32. I have a Samsung 750GB SATA drive. I’ve tried to enable AHCI in the BIOS of my mobo (Gigabyte EP45-DS3) but enabling it causes my computer to refuse to boot from my DVD drive (Pioneer DVR-216BK)

    Can someone help please?

    Comment by PALADiN — October 11, 2009 @ 11:56 am | Reply

  33. [...] Can't Boot to CD/DVD while AHCI is active (EP45-DS3) These benchmarks got me interested (I have a Samsung SATA drive). Apparently the DVD drive should always be on port [...]

    Pingback by Can't Boot to CD/DVD while AHCI is active (EP45-DS3) - TweakTown Forums — October 12, 2009 @ 6:27 am | Reply

  34. great article ! Well done

    Comment by Alex — October 17, 2009 @ 6:59 pm | Reply

  35. [...] your eSATA port. Most of the time AHCI will improve system performance. You can check out this great AHCI vs IDE test if you want specifics. This about sums it up….. [...]

    Pingback by AHCI or IDE...what's the difference? - Overclock.net - Overclocking.net — October 19, 2009 @ 2:19 pm | Reply

  36. [...] AHCI enables NCQ (Native command queuing) and faster multi-tasking response. See this article describing why you should use AHCI [...]

    Pingback by Enabling AHCI On Windows 7 Post Install « xaueious — October 28, 2009 @ 12:28 am | Reply


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