Every wondered about the UDMA naming convention?
You may have noticed upon bootup your devices are given a UDMA/ATA number
Thus:
ata-33 = UDMA 2
ata-66 = UDMA 4
ata-100 = UDMA 5
ata-133 = UDMA 6
But what happened to UDMA 3?
A while back reading some obscure history of IDE/ATA/UDMA i came upon the lost memeber of the family UDMA 3... apparently its ment to be 44mb/sec, and i thought i didnt exist until just now.
I got a new liteon 16x dvd drive, the 165H. Reading the doccumentation i was suprised to read
So UDMA 3 <b>DOES</b> exist after all.
<b>Cogposto tomsa, ergo sum - <i>Descartes</i>
</b>Translation:<b> I post at Toms Hardware, Therefor I am. </b>
You may have noticed upon bootup your devices are given a UDMA/ATA number
Thus:
ata-33 = UDMA 2
ata-66 = UDMA 4
ata-100 = UDMA 5
ata-133 = UDMA 6
But what happened to UDMA 3?
A while back reading some obscure history of IDE/ATA/UDMA i came upon the lost memeber of the family UDMA 3... apparently its ment to be 44mb/sec, and i thought i didnt exist until just now.
I got a new liteon 16x dvd drive, the 165H. Reading the doccumentation i was suprised to read
<A HREF="http://www.jlms.com.tw/new_p_E/jlms_165X.htm" target="_new">http://www.jlms.com.tw/new_p_E/jlms_165X.htm</A>Support up to Ultra-DMA Mode 3 ( 44.4 MB/sec 0
So UDMA 3 <b>DOES</b> exist after all.
<b>Cogposto tomsa, ergo sum - <i>Descartes</i>
</b>Translation:<b> I post at Toms Hardware, Therefor I am. </b>