Sequential Read/Write Speed

Using the 6-22-2008 build of Iometer I ran a 3 minute long 2MB sequential test over the entire span of the drive. The results reported are in average MB/s over the entire test length:

2MB Sequential Read - MB/s

This starts out very interesting. Each SATA port on our X58 board is bound by a 3Gbps transfer limit, but run two in parallel and you can go much higher. Our pair of X25-Vs are actually faster than Crucial's RealSSD C300 on a 6Gbps controller! That's absolutely nuts.

2MB Sequential Write - MB/s

Sequential write speed also shows a near doubling of performance, unfortunately that only brings us up to ~84MB/s. It's not bad for most users but if you do a lot of heavy downloading or file copying, you'll still be behind an Indilinx, Crucial or SandForce drive.

Introduction & The Test Random Read/Write Speed
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  • GullLars - Thursday, April 1, 2010 - link

    I think TRIM works i IDE mode also, i remember reading that both drivers PCIIDE and MSAHCI supports TRIM. However, this is not the big problem with using IDE mode, the problem is the loss of NCQ, so your performance don't scale with load. Your SSD will essentially only be able to do about 20MB/s at 4KB random read, while it can do 120MB/s random read with NCQ enabled (at fairly high load, like launching multiple apps simultaneously).
  • buzznut - Thursday, April 1, 2010 - link

    Thanks for the reply. I have been considering getting a new mobo anyway, I think I'd like to get a 890gx with the new interfaces.

    Only pb there is I have ddr2 ram and am2 cpus. doh

    Guess I'll wait til some money comes in to do any upgrading...
  • Elganja - Friday, April 2, 2010 - link

    "Update (03/29/2010): Intel has recently released a new driver that allows Windows 7’s TRIM instructions to be passed through the Southbridge. The new driver is labeled "Rapid Storage Technology 9.6" and it can be found here. These drivers are also able to pass TRIM commands to RAID 0 and RAID 1 arrays. "
  • jed22281 - Saturday, April 3, 2010 - link

    TT is mistaken, there is no support for drives combined into RAID volumes.
    There is for individual drives connected to the controller while it's in RAID mode.
    http://www.intel.com//support/chipsets/imsm/sb/CS-...

    Also see
    http://communities.intel.com/community/tech/solids...
    Look for the gold star at the top of the page, select show details and then go to announcement 2.

    "Intel® RST 9.6 supports TRIM in AHCI and pass through modes for RAID. A bug has been submitted to change the string that indicates TRIM is supported on RAID volumes (0, 1, 5, 10). Intel is continuing to investigate the ability of providing TRIM support for all RAID volumes in a future release."
  • Chloiber - Sunday, April 4, 2010 - link

    A colleague from another HW site asked Intel directly. It's definitely NOT SUPPORTED (just to point that out again). It's clearly a mistake of intel, as they didn't make themselves clear in the change logs/readmes and even in the rapid storage manager itself it's not clear.

    Here is what they said btw:

    "It will support TRIM with SSDs in an AHCI configuration, or with the RAID controller enabled and the SSD is used as a pass through device. An example of this use case is for users that want to use the SSD as a boot drive but still be able to RAID multiple HDDs together to allow for large protect data storage – a great use for the home theater PC."

    No RAID0 or anything. "Just" simple TRIM as we're used to from the MSAHCI drivers.
  • Elganja - Friday, April 2, 2010 - link

    The quote was from this article: http://www.tweaktown.com/articles/3116/tweaktown_s...
  • morphin1 - Friday, April 2, 2010 - link

    What do you mean by doing sequential write?
    How would you do that?
    Also will this apply to the new Sony Vaio Z series laptops SSD's that come in Raid 0 config?
    Is it recommended to buy a laptop in Raid 0 config with SSD's as over time they might become snails.
    Do you see the chance of Trim being supported on current SSD's in the near future?
    Thanks a lot in advance.
  • GullLars - Saturday, April 3, 2010 - link

    Sequential writes are the type of writes that typically occur when you save or copy large files (1MB or larger).

    As for RAID in sony Vaio. There is no way of telling if it will become snail-like whitout knowing wich SSD is in the laptop in question. If it's Intel, Sandforce, or C300, it sould be just fine, if it's some low-quality cheap SSD from last generation drives, or the crap they put in the netbooks last year, it will go really bad.
  • jed22281 - Saturday, April 3, 2010 - link

    You mean if it's:
    Postville (Intel), SF-1200/1500 (Sandforce), C300 (JMicron), or Barefoot (Indilinx)
  • GullLars - Saturday, April 3, 2010 - link

    I forgot barefoot, my bad.

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