Driftking120 Posted February 2, 2012 Share Posted February 2, 2012 Hi All, It's me again with more computer complains . This time its that my SSD seems to be performing the same as or slower then a regular HDD. This has been going on ever since the SSD was brand new. First time i started up the computer I was quite underwhelmed with the boot time of the SSD, It was practically the same as the old computer I had. The old computer I had has a Hatachi 7200RPM 1TB hard drive which i did NOT carry over. When installing GTA IV i actully experienced slower install time then when the old hard drive in the old computer. When playing GTA IV their was little to no load time improvements. And pretty soon, for whatever reason I began to get the "USB Hub Power Surge" message, which after reformating and reinstalling GTA IV had gone away which leaded me to believe that the SSD had messed up some Windows data. And after Reformatting i had appeared to have lost 100MB of disk space as after reformattiv it read 223.4GB of usable disk space instead of 223.5GB. Also after using the SSD for around a month it seems that it has gotten a bit slower. PC Specs: Case: Mountain Mods U2 UFO PSU: Corsair AX1200 Motherboard: MSI Big Bang Marshal(B3) P67 CPU: Intel Core i7 2700k CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D14 RAM: Muskin Enhanced Redline 1600Mhz 8GB(2x4GB) VGA: MSI 580GTX Lightning Xtreme Edition HDD: WD Caviar Black 1TB SSD: Corsair Force GT 240GB Any help is apreciated! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pico Posted February 2, 2012 Share Posted February 2, 2012 (edited) I've never had an SSD and do not know too much about them, but similar to you I'd expect a noticeable increase on reading times, as well as write times. I'd suggest getting a program that can give you data on the read/write speeds your SSD is going at and compare it to the Corsair's specs for the device. Combining the lack of perceptible performance differences and the 100MB loss... possibly defective? Best to run some tests on it and get some numbers to work with. edit: Found this with a little searching... Also make sure you run your drive in AHCI mode, it does make a difference. Read our recommendation on that to be able to solve and bypass the BSOD when going from SATA to AHCI. source: http://www.guru3d.com/article/corsair-forc...b-ssd-review/16 Edited February 2, 2012 by Pico Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stinky12 Posted February 2, 2012 Share Posted February 2, 2012 Make sure you enable TRIM mode in Windows 7 To enable: Open CMD with Administrator and type in fsutil behavior set disabledeletenotify 0 To verify that it's working fsutil behavior query disabledeletenotify results: DisableDeleteNotify = 1 (Windows TRIM is disabled)DisableDeleteNotify = 0 (Windows TRIM is enabled) And you may also want to update your SATA controller drivers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Driftking120 Posted February 2, 2012 Author Share Posted February 2, 2012 (edited) OK, I did the benchmark test with AS SSD Benchmark and I got: Seq. Read: 515MB/s Seq. Write: 251MB/s 4K Read: 20MB/s 4K Write: 50MB/s 4K-64Thrd Read: 191MB/s 4K-64Thrd Write: 224MB/s Acc Time Read: 0.116ms Acc Time Write: 0.322ms Why is my Seq. Write about half of what its suppose to be? Edited February 3, 2012 by Driftking120 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fozzy Fozborne Posted February 3, 2012 Share Posted February 3, 2012 Did you align it as a 4k drive? Did you enable AHCI? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Slamman Posted February 3, 2012 Share Posted February 3, 2012 SSD by all accounts should perform better then a conventional platter HDD so that seems to suggest an error somewhere. It's HITACHI, by the way! haha The fastest SCSI drives of old were rotating at 10,000rpm, I read a dated article saying that 10,000 RPM won't be surpassed anytime soon, and given that was back before SSD arrived, seems fairly accurate to say. There is some new tech being promised to do away with all conventional HDD, and no, I don't refer to the current SSDs! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Driftking120 Posted February 3, 2012 Author Share Posted February 3, 2012 What did you mean by "Align it as a 4k drive?" And i have it in AHCI mode . But still its not "feeling" fast even though i am getting close to advertised read speeds, although it still puzzles me why the write is half of what it should be . Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Exkabewbikadid Posted February 3, 2012 Share Posted February 3, 2012 You might want to check if it has the latest firmware version. If not, then that could be the problem. I have an old OCZ Agility 2 that acted a bit sluggish when I first installed it, but updating the firmware fixed it. Needless to say, your SSD isn't cheap, so if you can't find a fix, then have it RMA'd. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Slamman Posted February 3, 2012 Share Posted February 3, 2012 If worse comes to worse, see about swapping for the same, under warranty, best bet is a store exchange Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fozzy Fozborne Posted February 3, 2012 Share Posted February 3, 2012 What did you mean by "Align it as a 4k drive?" And i have it in AHCI mode .But still its not "feeling" fast even though i am getting close to advertised read speeds, although it still puzzles me why the write is half of what it should be . If you boot from a drive that isn't the SSD and try to format it. It will give you options the option of file system and allocation size. Change the allocation size to 4096 (4K) and format. Obviously you will lose your data on the SSD. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Driftking120 Posted February 4, 2012 Author Share Posted February 4, 2012 Oh ok that, I have mine set to default i think. I forgot what was the default but that sounds what option it was set to when i formatted the WD so I Probably have the Corsair set to that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now