Thanks for your time Jim. That answers that!
On Sun, 4 Apr 2004 19:08:39 -0700, "Jim" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>Disk *hardware* caching is always ON (i.e, can't be disabled), so the option
>to disable it is not provided (wouldn't serve any purpose). The only option
>you *do* have is to disable *Windows* disk caching, which many benchmarking
>tools use to prevent distortion of HD disk performance. FYI, in the end, it
>doesn't matter all that much that you even *have* a HD cache -- the Windows
>cache is MUCH bigger, more flexible, and traps so many requests in its own
>cache, the HD cache rarely gets hit! The HD cache is more marketing gimmic
>than anything else. It's only going to help in cases where the OS doesn't
>provide its own cache, like MS-DOS.
>
>HTH
>
>Jim
>
>
>"LundFanatic" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> I'd appreciate any help: I have XP home and the disk caching is turned
>> off. In device manager/properties/policies, it has the "optimized for
>> performance" checked, but is grayed out. It has nothing below it, such
>> as the box to check then enable/disable write caching on the disk box.
>> I have a 60 gig WD HD. I don't have the option to turn on the disk
>> caching. Any help is much appreciated!
>