Asus A8V-E DELUXE - SATA1 connector runs very slow.

G

groupie

I recently built a system which included an Asus A8V-E DELUXE mobo and
a Maxtor 250G S-ATA drive with 16Meg cache (6B250S0)hard drive. You can
get more information about my system at
http://www.pcpitstop.com/techexpress.asp?id=A4CGMW4UQBQS7X86.

When I had the S-ATA drive connected to the SATA1 connector on the
board (in IDE mode - NOT RAID) the disk rate that I was experiencing
was very slow at 4 MB/sec. When I switched it over to the SATA2
connector, my system performed much better at 50 MB/sec.

I am very happy with the performance that I now get out of this system.
However if I ever decide to add a second S-ATA drive as RAID 0 or
otherwise I assume that it will run slow again (this board only
supports 2).

Is there a setting that I forgot to set? Is the mobo faulty?

I would appreciate any input I get.

Thanks
W.
 
P

Paul

groupie said:
I recently built a system which included an Asus A8V-E DELUXE mobo and
a Maxtor 250G S-ATA drive with 16Meg cache (6B250S0)hard drive. You can
get more information about my system at
http://www.pcpitstop.com/techexpress.asp?id=A4CGMW4UQBQS7X86.

When I had the S-ATA drive connected to the SATA1 connector on the
board (in IDE mode - NOT RAID) the disk rate that I was experiencing
was very slow at 4 MB/sec. When I switched it over to the SATA2
connector, my system performed much better at 50 MB/sec.

I am very happy with the performance that I now get out of this system.
However if I ever decide to add a second S-ATA drive as RAID 0 or
otherwise I assume that it will run slow again (this board only
supports 2).

Is there a setting that I forgot to set? Is the mobo faulty?

I would appreciate any input I get.

Thanks
W.

All I can offer is a hint. 4MB/sec corresponds to PIO mode
transfer. The 50MB/sec corresponds to a DMA mode. You will
have to figure out why the drive operated in PIO mode, while
connected to SATA1.

A further hint, is possibly a couple of Windows OS will
automatically "downshift" the transfer rate from a disk,
if errors are being detected during read or write operations.
It could be that Windows saw enough errors coming from that
drive (say due to a loose or flaky SATA cable or disk interface),
that it has turned the transfer mode all the way down to PIO.

Check out the "workaround" here:

http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;817472

HTH,
Paul
 
G

groupie

I upgrated the chipset driver and the IDE, RAID and SATA driver which I
downloaded from the Via website. This fixed the problem.
 
G

groupie

FIXED! - Installed latest chipset driver and RAID, IDE and SATA driver
from Via website and this fixed the problem.

W.
 
P

Pollux

FIXED! - Installed latest chipset driver and RAID, IDE and SATA driver
from Via website and this fixed the problem.

W.

I'm seeing the same problem as you. I installed the Hyperion drivers,
but it still is slow. Did you install anything else?
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top