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- Sata 3 add on cards and their speed releative to SSD

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01-04-2017 08:40 AM
I want to add sata 3 ports via an add on card to my computer. I also want to buy an SSD. The end result would be that I could plug the ssd into the port on the add on card and get true ssd speeds.
What I want to know is, if I went that route, would that happen?
http://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c02668523 the link to my mother board
The link to a card I would consider to add. (not that I would know the difference between them.)
Thanks in advance,
Chef_D
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Accepted Solutions
01-04-2017 09:57 AM
What SHOULD happen, if you do that, is that you would then be able to boot Win7 from the SSD in very short time and have a faster running PC.
There are two issues, however:
1) Booting from the card -- I have found, sadly, that the ONLY reliable way to know if your PC will boot from a particular card is to try it out. In older PCs that did not have SATA booting, I had tried various cards and only SOME of them booted.
2) SSD speeds -- also, sadly, although there are RATED SSD speeds (i,e, SATA 1, 2, and 3), not all SSDs have the same performance results. This can often be evident in prices of new SSDs, as they tend to clump into price ranges, depending on their real-time performance.
A good site to check to see performance tests of SSDs is this one: http://www.hardocp.com/
You should browse their site and look for performance tests they have run on SSDs.
Good Luck
I am a volunteer and I do not work for, nor represent, HP
01-04-2017 09:57 AM
What SHOULD happen, if you do that, is that you would then be able to boot Win7 from the SSD in very short time and have a faster running PC.
There are two issues, however:
1) Booting from the card -- I have found, sadly, that the ONLY reliable way to know if your PC will boot from a particular card is to try it out. In older PCs that did not have SATA booting, I had tried various cards and only SOME of them booted.
2) SSD speeds -- also, sadly, although there are RATED SSD speeds (i,e, SATA 1, 2, and 3), not all SSDs have the same performance results. This can often be evident in prices of new SSDs, as they tend to clump into price ranges, depending on their real-time performance.
A good site to check to see performance tests of SSDs is this one: http://www.hardocp.com/
You should browse their site and look for performance tests they have run on SSDs.
Good Luck
I am a volunteer and I do not work for, nor represent, HP
01-04-2017 06:22 PM
Given the same SSD chips, there is no difference in performance between these two:
1) SSD PCi-e card mounted in a slot on the motherboard
2) PCi-e SATA 3 card connected to an SSD
The difference in performance is based on the chips used in the SSD.
I am a volunteer and I do not work for, nor represent, HP
01-05-2017 11:33 AM
I did some benchmarking using SSDs via SATA and PCIe SSDs. Using the same SSD, performance was slightly better via PCIe. The difference can be related to SATA protocol overhead is higher verses PCIe lane overhead. This is a big reason why SSDs are headed to PCIe connections either by m.2 connections or the by typical PCIe slot. When PCIe SSDs are running NVMe then the difference is even more noticeable.