Whats Faster - Sata 6 vs USB 3.0


Recommended Posts

I recently purchased 2x2 TB WD Caviar Green seeing as how best buy was having a sale and amazon also reduced the price, which will most likely go back and forth but I bought them because they are only 119 each. Anyway I plan to use these drives for storage only, now I currently have the same types of drives in a HDD Dock that is USB 3.0, and my motherboard natively supports Sata 6 on all the 5 ports available. My question is what would I be better off doing, putting the 2 drives I have in my dock now inside my computer, putting the new drives I'm getting in the dock, or installing them in my computer?. What is faster in terms of interface is what I'm trying to say...Sata 6 or USB 3.0.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1069040-whats-faster-sata-6-vs-usb-30/
Share on other sites

Either way you will get the same results. crap speeds

The connection isnt your bottleneck - its those hard drives.

But to answer your question, the SATA 6Gb connection is currently showing better speeds. I think it has to do with USB3.0 driver maturity.

Both have the ability to get really fast, but right now SATAIII has the edge.

One drive supports USB 3 and the other SATA3. Both of these interfaces support a maximum throughput, but that doesn't mean these drives ever meet that speed.

The only type of hard drives that in fact come even close are SSD's, they work in an entirely different way. I have a couple of fairly fast platter based hard drives and the fastest I've seen out of them via SATA3 is 120MB/s (for large read/writes from a 2nd drive of the same type) which is nothing close to the actual throughput for sata 3, it's actually 0.9375 gigabits.

These drives are connected to SATA 3 but they only have SATA 2 controllers and they don't even hit the max speed for sata 2. My SSD smokes them, it's super fast but even that only has a SATA 2 controller!

So there you have it, don't worry about the interface type at all, look for actual benchmarks for these drives to see how they stack against each other.

What does that mean when you say USB always adds unnecessary overhead (especially when copying huge files)

USB is a host controlled protocol. Very little is typically offloaded at the chipset level. With SATA the chipset controls most of it and the CPU deals with the data as little as possible.

You probably won't usually notice unless you're doing a lot of things at once, with todays CPUs.

youll not see any performance above SATA2 speeds in all honesty with either solution. Physical hard disks are limited by rotational speeds of the platters/mechanical limits. The only way to see perf speeds near SATAIII or USB3 is with SSDs.

the only difference on those drives to previous generations is the interface, nothing has changed internally (or minor things like larger cache) pointless tbvh.

What's wrong with the hard drives? the interface on it supports sata 3 and 6 so I don't understand.

Green hard drives spin at 5400 RPM. So, it doesn't matter whether you have SATA6 connection or USB3, the drive itself is not going to be as fast. There's nothing 'wrong' with the drives per se, but they are slower, and designed primarily for storage, not for speed.

SATA-based interfaces also support OS-level Native Command Queueing (NCQ), which decides which orders read/write operations to minimize seeking, in theory making it faster.

if the HDD supports it, when connected via USB Win7 will enable NCQ etc on the USB drives also. As long as it detects the drive properly. But your right less overheads using SATA, but in real world it will make next to no difference as the drives themselves wont get past max USB2/SATA2 upper limits anyways, due to mechanical lmitations on the drives.

I do not like how I have to reboot the computer when I connect a SATA drive. USB3 might be slower but much more convenient.

If your computer has a SATA dock, you should be able to unplug it whenever you would a USB drive because it should support hot swapping... (I'd check that in your motherboard manual though)

SATAIII has 6GBs and USB 3.0 has 5GBs.

sorry, but this misinfo needs to stop. i see it all too often. SATA3 offers 6Gb/s, not 6GB/s. there's a HUGE difference. likewise, USB3 offers a theoretical 5Gb/s, not 5GB/s.

so, OP, USB3 offers a maximum of 625MB/s throughput, but in practice, you'll be lucky to see 350MB/s. That WD Green hard drive is only going to transfer at a maximum of like 80MB/s w/ a large sequential transfer. Write speeds are likely to be even slower.

  • Like 2

What's wrong with the hard drives? the interface on it supports sata 3 and 6 so I don't understand.

In a way you can think of it like this - You can buy a new sports car that can reach 240MPH but you are limited to 60MPH because of laws and all that. :D In this case, the road is 6000MPH (Mbps) but the car only maxes out at 150MPH (150MB/s). You can floor it and put in the best gas and tons of stickers (:p) but that wont make it go any faster because it's already at the MAX.

HDDs can only spin so far and push so much data - SSDs on the other hand can reach the magical 550MB/s however.

Internal mounted drives are generally better than external because there is less control throughput. An external dock will have it's own controller which may or may not instruct the drive to "power down" when not in use, among other things, and you won't have much of a choice to override that. If internally mounted, you'll be connected directly to the SATA controller on the motherboard and will have more power control.

Beyond all of this, as others have already said, most of this means nothing since this is a mechanical hard drive we are talking about. And on top of that, it's a Caviar Green, which in my opinion is a terrible terrible drive. They are slow and unreliable, so my advise is to not keep anything on there that will ruin your life if/when the drive dies.

The drive still uses an underlying SATA interface regardless of the capabilities of USB3. SATA could be 6Gbps and USB3.0 at 6000Gbps but it is still going to run at 6Gbps because that is what is is really using. USB3.0 is just an extra layer if you don't need it for portability/easy connectivity.

Nothing, you're simply faced with the reality that rotational hard drives are limited by their inherently slow design.

Think of it an an autobahn. The speed limit is 350 but your Toyota can only do 200.

there's no speed limit on the autobahn, only sections where there is a recommended speed. you can go as fast as you want in most parts without incident.

I do not like how I have to reboot the computer when I connect a SATA drive. USB3 might be slower but much more convenient.

You don't. If you have a hotswap chassis, or cables that support hotswap, you can hot-plug a drive. The difference is that in a hot plug cable, the ground pins stick out further than the 5v and 12v pins, so the ground lines make connection first. Once the drive is grounded, it can have power applied and not have an issue. All my sata 2 drives in my file server can be hot plugged at-will.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Plans. Christ at least editorialise this tripe for what it is or put your own journalistic take on it.
    • If you have a TV in your living room, chances are you can probably just use the Steam Link app and play your huge PC in big picture mode, effectively giving you the Steam Machine experience to see if you'd actually like it. The good news is the Steam Machine can have it's drives upgraded. It has a USB-C 10Gbs port as well, so the 512GB drive could be quickly moved to an external enclosure and repurposed.
    • This machine could very well be a second gaming PC for their living room as a console experience. So we would have to assume their main PC exists as well; With that said, I have 10gb home network with a 2.5gigabit internet connection here so we tend to have more than enough speed to download games. However, we can't make use of the 10gb LAN using Steam's built in transfer tool because it always compresses transfers and that slows the transfer down to well below a standard gigabit port speeds, sometimes as slow as 200-300Mb/s transfers. While that's probably still faster than most internet connections anyway, if they'd fix the LAN transfer issue it'd be upto x5 faster even on a gigabit LAN, than simply dropping a 2.5gbe port on there with hopes of a few people having fast internet connections. There are solutions, work arounds, like using LANCache if you run a NAS... or simply copying the files over manually using a network share.
    • Samsung announces ultra-fast UFS 5.0 storage to supercharge mobile AI by Paul Hill Local AI models tend to run a lot more slowly than cloud services like Claude and Gemini; however, Samsung has just announced that it has developed its UFS 5.0 solution, which increases data transfer to speeds of 10.8GB/s, enabling faster storage and processing in mobile memory that has the potential to provide more optimal local AI experiences. Commenting on this development, Jangseok Choi, head of Memory Product Planning at Samsung Electronics, said: If you’ve tried local AI, you’ll know it can be quite slow, especially if using the larger parameter models. By developing this new solution, Samsung says that storage is evolving from just storing data to a core piece of infrastructure that supports AI computation, too. The Korean company said that UFS 5.0 integrates the latest embedded memory interface standard from JEDEC and achieves up to 10.8 gigabytes per second (GB/s) transfer speeds. Regarding write speeds, Samsung UFS 5.0 can reach 9.5 GB/s. Both the read and write speeds are twice as fast as those of the previous UFS 4.1 standard. Aside from being ideal for local AI, Samsung’s UFS 5.0 is more power efficient by 40% compared to UFS 4.1. Samsung achieved this by implementing innovations such as clock gating and multi-voltage technologies. UFS 5.0 is also ultra-compact at just 7.5mm x 13mm x 0.9mm; that is 16.7% smaller than UFS 4.1. The company said it will be bringing it to multiple devices in the future, including mobile, wearable, and extended reality.
    • A bit like the steamdeck, this probably isn't for you.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      496
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      209
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      99
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      86
    5. 5
      neufuse
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!