Dock Mode

In the first dock mode test, we connected the 128 GB Kingston SSD to the 'Destination' port of the SATDUPUE. On the PC, we had the 120 GB OCZ Vertex SSD.

Docked SSD Transfer Rates (MBps)

 
  eSATA USB
     
Read from SATDUPUE to PC 138.27 38.57
Write from SATDUPUE to PC 154.71 28.34

In the second dock mode test, we connected the Seagate Barracuda LP 2000 GB drive to the SATDUPUE and retained the OCZ SSD in the PC.

Docked HDD Transfer Rates (MBps)

 
  eSATA USB
     
Read from SATDUPUE to PC 110.38 37.42
Write from SATDUPUE to PC 107.02 28.12

In eSATA mode with the hard disk attached, the unit consumed around 9.6W of power on an average. The power consumption is heavily dependent on the type of disk attached to the unit.

Duplicator Mode

In order to determine the characteristics in the duplicator mode, we tested the cloning of both SSDs and HDDs. The table below summarizes our observations:

SATDUPUE Duplicator Mode Characteristics

 
Source Destination Time Xfer Rate(MBps) Av. Power(W) Max. Temp. (C)
           
128 GB SSD 2 TB HDD 16m 45s 127.36 9.8 49
120 GB SSD 128 GB SSD 10m 12s 196.08 8.4 47
2 TB Samsung HDD 2 TB Seagate HDD 5h 17m 28s 104.99 15.9 65

The temperature towards the end of the cloning process with a Ryobi non-contact infrared thermometer on the upper and lower sides of the SATDUPUE. The readings have an accuracy of +-5 C. The power consumption reported is the average power consumed over the course of the cloning, as measured using a Watts Up Pro power analyzer.

Though StarTech.com claims only 72 MBps transfer rate in clone mode, we found that SSDs could deliver much higher rates. Even hard disks were found to have better performance than claimed. However, waiting for more than 5 hours to get a 2 TB drive cloned does test one's patience. Support for 6 Gbps SATA ports in the JMB352U bridge could have helped here.

All in all, the SATDUPUE works better than it claims. It is available on StarTech.com for less than $80, but can be found for a much lower price point at various resellers like TigerDirect. We conclude the review with a list of the pros and cons of the SATDUPUE:

Pros:

  1. Cloning rates of more than 190 MBps (when suitable SSDs are used)
  2. Multipurpose gadget with both eSATA / USB dock as well as clone mode
  3. JBOD configuration for attached drives over USB 2.0
  4. Easily portable form factor

Cons:

  1. Product and power adapter cables appear very fragile. The user needs to be very careful when dealing with multiple 3.5" HDDs and the SATA connectors on the SATDUPUE.
  2. Product gets quite hot to touch and needs proper heat dissipation when operating
  3. Comparable product from Bytecc (BT-340) seems to be much cheaper
Unboxing and Test Setup
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  • steven75 - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    Why would it write to the source disk at all? That makes no sense... I've never cloned a HDD that in any way modified the source disk, so why would this be any different?
  • ganeshts - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    I agree that it need not modify the disk connected to the source port in clone mode, but it does send writes to that port when connected to a PC in, say, JBOD configuration.

    Probably, it costs some money to get the certification. I have to say that this certification issue is not something I researched into, as I was more concerned with the technical aspects. Something to keep in mind for future reviews :) Thanks to c4v3man for pointing it out.
  • c4v3man - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    The problem isn't so much that it likely won't write to the source disk, the problem is that it's not tested or provable in court that it could not. The certification is obviously the important part here as you noted.

    Thank you for the reply. With as many drives as we clone (which is rarely ever forensically sensitive) we go through 2-3 of these generic adapters a year. It's still alot cheaper than using our Tableau to the point of failure. It's a shame that the startech adapter isn't USB3 rated...
  • OmniWrench - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    Just curious, were the duplicates compared to the original drives in some way to be sure that the duplication itself was bug-free?
  • ganeshts - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    The duplicated drive behaved in the same manner as the original drive (i.e, folder and file accesses returned the same data); All partitions in the original drive were retained when viewed in Windows Explorer. I didn't take the trouble to do any further steps to verify exact duplication.
  • jsg11 - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    Just because a folder and files have been copied does not mean that the device has been duplicated. The duplicate must be verified using entire drive hashing. The Tableau device referenced by c4v3man uses both MD5 and SHA1 hashes to ensure that the duplicate is the exact same as the original. A Ghost clone would copy the files and folders, but a hardware device must be able to perform a sector-by-sector copy of one drive onto the other and prove that it copied everything exactly using verification hashes. Otherwise, in the eyes of a forensic examiner, it is not a forensic duplicator.

    And yes, I completely agree with c4v3man, in that this device should not be marketed as forensics device as it yet to be proven to not modify the source device, and I sincerely doubt there are any protections from write accesses by the device to the source drive. Using a device like this to make a copy of an evidence drive would get an examiner torn apart by a good attorney. For anyone interested, here is a link for the tools that have actually been tested for forensics by the US Department of Justice and NIST:
    http://www.cftt.nist.gov/
  • 7Enigma - Monday, September 12, 2011 - link

    I'll be honest. I was also hoping for some sort of integrity check moreso than just a "it works". That to me would have been the icing on the cake that would have also quelled some of the poor/undetailed review comments.
  • mariush - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    I'm sorry, how is this a review? It's basically an unboxing... with some speed tests.

    Open it up, show its insides... explain..

    is it made well enough, did they cut corners on something inside?

    is the heat potentially going to kill it (if it's hot and they use 85c capacitors inside the device it's going to die in 1-2 years of use) ?

    is the power supply actually capable of 36 watts without burning your carpet, how's the insides of that as well, is it some Chinese crap or something decent ?

    how is the device handling various devices, will it work well with sata to ide bridges, sata 1 drives, Flash drives connected through some adapters to the SATA

    how well does it handle "sick" drives? let's say I have a drive that at some points it needs a lot of time to read data or it times out at some SATA commands but then recovers - is the device smart enough to send reset commands or does it do plenty of retry commands so that someone could actually use it to duplicate a faulty drive?
  • ganeshts - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    Unfortunately, this is a screwless device. I tried my best to open it, but realized that it wouldn't be possible without risking some damage to the SATA connectors (since the seam points seem to be wedged against those).

    I think the PSU is a bit of an overkill just to account for some really power hungry SATA drives. It is almost like a laptop power brick.

    As for sick drives, yes, I did test one -- but, the LED for the port came up red instead of green and no further action was possible. So, if the drive is dead, no luck with this device.
  • LoneWolf15 - Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - link

    What happens if the device is in duplicator mode and it encounters a bad sector?

    Many of us would like to have a device like this for emergency cloning of a failing drive to another drive.

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