Difference in SSD performace between a SATA II and SATA III PC


Recommended Posts

I have a several year old desktop PC with SATA II interface in which I installed a Samsung 850 EVO SSD. It's running well, but I am wondering specifically to the difference between SATA II and SATA III if there would be a small or large difference in performance  with the Samsung SSD.

I've got a SATA II PC with a OCZ Vertex II and a SATA III PC with Sandisk Plus SSD so there's more at play than just the SATA version here, but do I notice a difference? Yes. How big is the difference? Not as big as the difference between mechanical HDD and SSD but there is big difference when writing/reading to the SSD to me.

Correct, sata 2 will obviously will be slower than Sata 3 but going with an SSD from an HDD is still well worth it. I have a lot of machines in my house none of them run HDD's as boot drives.

Just put an SSD into a HP DV6000 w/ 1GB of RAM and a Centrino Duo 2, from around 2007. It's more than capable of getting a few more years out of it. Boots in less than 30 seconds and doens't really lag around for basic operations. Perfect for word processing, e-mail/internet and even netflix.

Here's my Samsung 840 on SATA2 vs SATA3 for comparison.

SATA2 / SATA3:

S2S3.thumb.png.0c43c4ceebaa0a11929d267dd

Benchmarks show the difference is quite large, it would be even bigger for an 850 because it doesn't have the 250MB/s sequential write limit the 840 has. In real world use I don't notice a whole lot of difference, obviously it depends on your usage though. Either way it's certainly nothing compared to going from HDD -> SDD.

 

 

Truth is neither will reach the max specified speeds. Same thing applies to mechanical IDE and SATA HDD's as well.

That's because of the implementation, not because of the SSD, and is the same for any protocol. The protocol has overhead and if you use more than one device there is contention, etc.

the vast majority of data I/O on an SSD is the small 4k files. How often is anyone transferring large, sequential files? SATA2 will never saturate a large set of 4k files b/c all SATA SSDs have 4k transfer rates of <100MB/s. that's not even close to saturating the protocol.

point is, in the 'real world' you probably wont noticed much of a difference b/w the 2 protocols.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I think the car analogy is more this: Left hand drive, basic commands on the left side of the infotainment screen. Right hand drive, basic commands on the right side of the infotainment screen. Granted, you're not swapping between the two often so it's doesn't really work. But it's to do with the proximity of you (your mouse, or the driver) to the controls.
    • I mean, the old one was broken and so stupidly complex for many users, so I don't see that as a feasible option. A context menu needs to be simple to use, and for me the Windows 11 style actually worked really well for me, and many others. I used to have to scroll the damn context menu just to get to "file properties" in Windows 10. That was not a good experience, and I'm sure you'd agree. What they're trying to do is make it the best of both worlds, as clearly you'd prefer the Win10 style. I'm curious how they're going to do this.
    • The "Show more options" has its place, as does the simpler context menu, but it should perhaps be a separate fly-out rather than relaunching the entire, old context menu. The old context menu was getting absurd in Windows 10. Often I'd have to make the context menu scroll just to get to "File properties" on my old laptop. Even without much installed, the amount of items was just too much. It's a context menu, not a "do all" menu. Making it configurable is fraught with challenges too, so I'm interested to see how Microsoft tackles this one.
    • I don't hate the new menus, I am not a fan of the lack of features and how they went live when they clearly are not complete. The menu itself presents much better than the previous - but what's lacking (IMO) is: 1) Any kind of automated manipulation such as: "this goes on the new menu because you use this feature more often on this filetype" "this is rarely used and will fall back to the old menu" 2) Any kind of user manipulation such as: "a UI to add/remove/order items to the new menu"
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      I2D earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      484
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      258
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      84
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      64
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      63
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!