AHCI for SSD's

tomcork

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Jan 13, 2015
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I have ordered a 256gb SSD and while doing research, i noticed the mention of using AHCI mode. Does this make a big real world difference. I don't care about benchmark scores but just real world responsiveness.
 
Solution
NO noticeable difference.
You will be impressed with a ssd.
I might suggest Samsung or intel which have free clone apps that make conversion simple.

In the bios, there will be a sata mode setting.
The options will be AHCI, IDE, and possibly raid.
AHCI is a subset of raid.(I do not recommend raid for anything)
Newer motherboards will default to AHCI.

Whatever you find, it is not readily changeable without a windows reinstall or a registry hack process.
If you are using IDE, then windows 7, at least will not have the drivers necessary to boot.



so there will not be much noticeable performance increase from using sata without ahci mode?
 
NO noticeable difference.
You will be impressed with a ssd.
I might suggest Samsung or intel which have free clone apps that make conversion simple.

In the bios, there will be a sata mode setting.
The options will be AHCI, IDE, and possibly raid.
AHCI is a subset of raid.(I do not recommend raid for anything)
Newer motherboards will default to AHCI.

Whatever you find, it is not readily changeable without a windows reinstall or a registry hack process.
If you are using IDE, then windows 7, at least will not have the drivers necessary to boot.
 
Solution
Most motherboards default to AHCI now anyway, but if not, look for SATA settings in your bios under an advanced tab. You will have 3 options. IDE/AHCI/RAID. Just select AHCI before you install windows. Like the guy above me said, you need AHCI to enable TRIM, which keeps your SSD garbage free. I recommend it for sure. 😉
 


Yeah. I think my motherboard is too old to support AHCI mode. That's probably why I cannot find it.
 


garbage free? please explain.
 


This should help explain: http://www.techspot.com/news/52835-understanding-ssds-the-need-for-trim-overprovisioning-and-more.html
 

I guess you are right.
And... because your sata ports are limited to 3Gb/s, your benchmarks will look bat with a sequential transfer in the 200-300 range.
Again, not to worry. That is still 2x the fastest hard drives and almost no impact in small random I/O which is the most important.

If you have not bought your ssd already, I suggest Samsung EVO or Intel 730.
They both come with clone utilities.
 


I'm doing a clean install just because OS is only a few months old and I don't want old graphics drivers also being cloned. I'd rather have it running as optimally I can get it for my set up.
 

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