as has already been asked is compatible and if so what do I need to install, adapter? Changes in the performance?
MfG Horst Kahler
Antwort von Markus73:
"Kahler Horst" wrote:
as has already been asked is compatible
No, of course not, "classical" ATA is not a SATA, the times do not match, the transmission standard is completely different.
There are converter, but I would not use such things as missing interfaces can be retrofitted for less money.
Regards, Markus
Antwort von Horst Kahler:
Hi Mark,
Many thanks for your reply. One more question: which interface is a special name for it?
Regards Horst
Antwort von Markus73:
Well, if you want to connect a SATA drive, you just need to upgrade SATA interfaces, if not available. There's little money to buy for example as a plug-in PCI card. If your PC is still such a slot is free, should that be the easiest solution.
Regards, Markus
Antwort von makiHD:
Hi, so basically it does not fit, can you also buy a PCI SATA controller.
But since you have to consider the following:
- MUST Controller S-ATA II or S-ATA300 run support (otherwise most of the plates is slow or are not recognized at first. - Are stable - Features such as NCQ exhibit - The controller chip synonymous bring a good performance.
If you read the reviews for alternate, as only very few devices come into question, and then wirds synonymous same 3 digits.
You can, of course, synonymous SATA disks connected via USB, but go of transfer of no more than 25MB / s off!
My advice: let such a thing of the fingers. Think vllt if you so much for the money rather not buy a new motherboard, where your previous cases draufpassen (CPU, RAM, etc). And most boards since 2005 have eigenlich nen S-ATA controller s.Bord. From this it can take a slightly more favorable synonymous, a GigaByte around.
Antwort von Markus73:
.... and I would like to ask once more the question / idea in the room, how far can match quality from an onboard controller with a retrofitted.
Regards, Markus
Antwort von makiHD:
"Markus73" wrote:
.... and I would like to ask once more the question / idea in the room, how far can match quality from an onboard controller with a retrofitted.
Regards, Markus
Well, we say:
I'm assuming that as the S-ATA controller with the same hard drive on an ASUS board not much slower or worse than the quality from a Gigabyte board.
Of course, I mean 2 controllers, the (support the same features as S-ATA 300), otherwise you can not even compare.
Otherwise: The controller should be current so vorranging first time (see above conditions), the rest follows from it yes, that is speed, reliability, etc.
I think the differences between the Controller and nem nem ASUS Gigabyte controller (which will indeed ere determined only from the chipset) are minimal, so maybe + - 2%.