2018-10-10 03:46 AM
2018-10-10 03:52 AM
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2018-10-10 04:12 AM
2018-10-10 05:18 AM
sboydturner wrote:Hi Scott,
I would change the SSD drive to a samsung 960 pro m.2 drive as much faster that standard ssd.
Regards
Scott
2018-10-10 06:02 AM
Lingwisyer wrote:Hi Ling,
I would add another of your 2TB Seagates and put them in Raid 1 if you are not keeping file backups elsewhere. It is nice to have redundancy in case a drive fails, especially for work files. Also, the case comes with one fan? I would probably add a second.
Ling.
2018-10-10 11:00 AM
Liamthanks wrote:I just bought a Samsung 970 EVO for 150€. It shouldn't be any higher in dollars, probably less:
sboydturner wrote:At $599 from my preferred supplier, it is quite the jump up from the $115 for the WD Blue
..samsung 960 pro m.2 drive as much faster that standard ssd.
2018-10-10 11:57 AM
mikas wrote:Funny you mention that, I went and had a look into it after the previous comment and that model is actually the one I ended up choosing. It's $228 at my supplier, which I am happy with if it means better performance. Being an M.2, does this mean it has a different connection type? Are all motherboards compatible with this?
Liamthanks wrote:I just bought a Samsung 970 EVO for 150€. It shouldn't be any higher in dollars, probably less:
sboydturner wrote:At $599 from my preferred supplier, it is quite the jump up from the $115 for the WD Blue
..samsung 960 pro m.2 drive as much faster that standard ssd.
SSD 970 EVO NVMe M.2 500GB
I have tried it all, HDD, SSD, SSD RAID, and PCIe M.2 AHCI allready. NVMe should be even faster. It's not all about continuous transfer rates, it's about fast access times and low latencies too.
Fast program starts, fast system startups, fast file opens, fast file saves. Fast everything.
I believe SATA SSD is sufficient, but M.2 SSD would be great.
2018-10-10 01:25 PM
2018-10-10 01:35 PM
Liamthanks wrote:Yes, the M.2 connection is different from standard SATA. Most of the newer motherboards have these it but it's always better make sure. The B450 chipset usually has a single M.2 slot that supports PCIe as well as SATA drives.
Being an M.2, does this mean it has a different connection type? Are all motherboards compatible with this?
2018-10-10 01:36 PM
4x SATA 6Gb/s ports
Supports RAID 0, RAID1 and RAID 10
1x M.2 slot (Key M)
Supports PCIe 3.0 x4 and SATA 6Gb/s 2242/ 2260 /2280 storage devices