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29-02-2012, 09:24 PM | #1 | ||
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Hey guys, looking to purchase a new computer and I must be lagging behind the times - but the guy in the shop says these SSD's are the bomb for faster boot up time and faster loading of programs and caching.
Has anyone had any experience with them and are they what they say they are? Cheers..
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CURRENT 2013 335 GT - BMC twin filter, Herrod IC, injectors, fuel pump, oil breather, SC pulley and balancer, X-force 2 1/2" cat back with high flow cats = 453rwkw. Thanks to Lee at Real Dyno performance. OLD 2010 FPV F6 FG - Herrod CAI, Pedders extreme XA's, Whiteline fr & rear swaybars, PWR stepped IC, injectors, turbo dump pipe with Venom cat, Herrod piping kit = 350rwkw |
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29-02-2012, 09:29 PM | #2 | ||
Regular Member
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Location: Hoppers Crossing
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hi,
yeah the SSDs are great - extra quick boot up times. plenty of good ones out there on the market. i built a hackintosh (mac OS running on Intel hardware) and used an SSD setup with TRIM - it boots up in seconds, as opposed to my macbook pro i7 which takes about a minute with its 5400rpm 750gb drive, and, my mac mini with similar drive spec.... i'd recommend a SSD for your 'OS' drive, and, another larger drive for all your data ect maybe games and other junk you put on there so it doesn't clog up the SSD hope this helps mate |
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01-03-2012, 08:35 AM | #3 | ||
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 242
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Yeah my new pc I built with a SSD for the first time - makes a massive difference in OS/app launches. Takes 10 seconds for my new pc to boot to a usable state. Photoshop cs5.5 launches in 1 second literally. My mistake is not forking out extra for a bigger drive - I only bought a 64 gig drive which is not enough for all my programs and the OS... 128 should be the very smallest you should get! (my specs: i7 2600k OC to 4.5ghz, 16gb ram (1666mhz), etc etc)
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01-03-2012, 10:11 AM | #4 | ||
Banned
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They are bulletproof and low power.
We have been using them in recordable DVD's etc. as a server hard drive they are great, no need for raid etc, just a periodic backup. But be careful, they all read fast, but cheap ones have a slow write speed. i recommend the OCZ brand....some seriously good stuff in their range. |
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01-03-2012, 07:14 PM | #5 | |||
Regular Schmuck
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No need for RAID if you're using an SSD in a server? BAD advice, unless you have no care for unplanned outages. |
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06-03-2012, 03:02 PM | #6 | |||
Za Dom spremni
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Quote:
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06-03-2012, 03:18 PM | #7 | ||
Stroking it...
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I run a SSD in my Lap top, and as already stated I could never go back to a mechanical drive, the difference is astounding... Yes mechanical drives are considered more reliable, but then I have seen a fair few mechanical disks fail in the first few months of their life.. It can just be the luck of the draw..
There were some issues with the older firmware on the OCZ drives, which has been rectified (some info here: http://techreport.com/articles.x/21934). As stated above probably 90% of BSOD's are morso user related. It's like blaming a new engine for the reason you're car sometimes stalls.. In short - Do.It.
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07-03-2012, 10:18 AM | #8 | |||
Fossil fuel consumer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Mod For: Pub, Bar, Sales Yard, Show 'N Shine, Photoshop, AU to BF, FG to FGX, Territory & Sports Bar
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Quote:
SSD's are a fantastic theory, but the practice isn't so great. There are many ways for an SSD to fail, and they inherently slow down over time by design. Mind you this is minimal comparatively. They're great for boot times, and loading games if that's your thing. However for everyday applications, there is bugger all difference. They're far from perfect, so i'd wait another few years before bothering again. After throwing a total of $480 down the crapper i was less than impressed. The clincher is mechanical HDD's generally fail progressively, and you can see (hear) it coming a lot of the time. With SSD's, it's generally "Hello PC user, i'm working absolutely 100 perc........fail".
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07-03-2012, 03:09 PM | #9 | ||||
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Quote:
Like any device they all have their pros and cons. SSD have more pros in my opinion, you had some bad luck with early SSD drives... Moving forward, mechanical drives are dinosaurs. Quote:
Are you sure it's in the design or is that based on the experience you had with yours? |
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07-03-2012, 03:30 PM | #10 | ||||||
Fossil fuel consumer
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http://www.brighthub.com/computing/h...les/43400.aspx http://www.computerworld.com/s/artic...wn_inevitable_ TRIM was introduced to alleviate this issue, by effectively reducing the amount of needless writing to the disc. SSD's have a limited amount of writes before they're cactus, which may seem large on paper depending on the brand and type, but can run out quickly in certain applications.
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07-03-2012, 10:05 PM | #11 | |||
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Your experiences differ from mine. Thanks for the link, but it's journalistic opinion. I have a rough idea about solid state drives, installed my first SSD in 1988 so reckon I have a bit of an idea about the alternate byte technology, hamming correction and electronic cyclic check workings. We were repairing them to component level then, run a test routine, compare data, unsolder chip. yeah...they slow down as alternate locations are allocated, but so do mechanical drives. Last year and a half I tested and installed 1300 Toshiba laptops with SSD drives... Less than 3 SSD failures in that time. Last year I retro fitted approx 100 SSD drives into various systems as their mechanical drives failed, mostly laptops, and a handful of HP Proliant small business servers. I installed and have maintained a site with 48 HP Z600 CAD workstations with OCX Revodrive 480Gb Pci express SSD drives. Zero failures, zero blue screens...fast and furious performance. You get what you pay for in speed and quality.. VertexII drive? yeah...got one as a workbench mule. Last edited by z80; 07-03-2012 at 10:13 PM. |
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01-03-2012, 10:14 AM | #12 | ||
Flairs - Truckers Delight
Join Date: Aug 2006
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They are not bulletproof. Just google for SSD and bluescreen - some people are having horrible troubles.
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01-03-2012, 10:41 AM | #13 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,146
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SSD's are great.
I've been using them since they first came out. A few points to note (facts here rather than opinion) 1: Mechanical drives are more reliable, however Intel SSD's are considered almost as good, although they are the most expensive. I use two OXZ vertex in a raid 0 for OS and programs. Those who say raid isn't necessary are not making the most of their SSD's. Read/Write speeds are basically doubled. 2: Don't rely on them for anything. Thats to say all important data must be backed up to one or two seperate mechanical drives. Don't do what most do and have your outlook data store on them and cry when it gets lost. 3: Once you've used them its impossible to go back to mechanical drives.... they're just so damn slow. 4: So get them in your new PC. Just be careful you don't get stiffed on specs or price. PM me if you need more info. (I'm not in the industry now but used to work for wholesalers and retailers) |
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01-03-2012, 01:32 PM | #14 | ||
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Location: Brisbane
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So if in the scenario I wished to play the latest Call of Duty game and didn't have sufficient space on the SSD and stored in on a separate hard disk, would it make the SSD redundant because the load up time would be the same?
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CURRENT 2013 335 GT - BMC twin filter, Herrod IC, injectors, fuel pump, oil breather, SC pulley and balancer, X-force 2 1/2" cat back with high flow cats = 453rwkw. Thanks to Lee at Real Dyno performance. OLD 2010 FPV F6 FG - Herrod CAI, Pedders extreme XA's, Whiteline fr & rear swaybars, PWR stepped IC, injectors, turbo dump pipe with Venom cat, Herrod piping kit = 350rwkw |
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01-03-2012, 01:35 PM | #15 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Yup....128gb needs to be your minimum.....then you should be fine
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01-03-2012, 02:12 PM | #16 | ||
OCD keeps me busy...
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Location: Melbourne
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I'm running the OCZ Vertex 3 Max IOPS 120GB SSD and have been so far very impressed.
Par for the course is to buy yourself a portable 1TB HDD and set a weekly backup to avoid tears |
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01-03-2012, 07:26 PM | #17 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Your blue screens may not be all ssd based....are you using an intel platform ?
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02-03-2012, 07:19 AM | #18 | |||
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But as I said, since the last firmware update, my bluescreens have gone from several a day to one every few weeks. |
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01-03-2012, 08:27 PM | #19 | |||
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our developers at work went over our heads and all got them selves OCZ SSD drives. out of 62 drives all 62 failed within 2 months. all of them were replaced, which took ages, of the replaced drives currently 57 have failed. the other 3 went in thebin along with the 57 failed drives. We got our say and they all now run intel drives, developers report better speeds and so far none have failed after almost 1 year of operation.
would I run a SSD, nope, not unless it was a RAID 1 or 5 set of drives.... Z80, to suggest you dont need RAID for SSD especialy in a server is like saying cars dont need wheels.
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01-03-2012, 08:57 PM | #20 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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to follow from the above statement.....we retailed over 500 OZC ssd's and returned 12....Personally I'd buy Intel now
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06-03-2012, 11:51 AM | #21 | ||
Banned
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Much to everyone's disgust I'll come out and say that most computer component failures are caused by the user.
Most people fail to observe electrostatic discharge requirements. (most in this thread probably have NFI what ESD is) SSD are not unreliable technologies, if you read the warnings, wear an approved wrist strap, you will enjoy a greater period of reliability with....well just about anything to do with PC's. |
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06-03-2012, 12:17 PM | #22 | ||||
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The MTBF is *assumed* to be better than that of mechanical drives due to lower power consumption, lower heat and no moving parts - but we've yet to reach that point in time where it's empirically proven. Early figures suggest that the failure rate of SSD is only slightly better than mechanical drives - but then you never quite know whether the source of those figures are pushing an agenda. I've personally replaced hundreds of SSD's in Enterprise solutions. To suggest RAID is not necessary due to reliability is destined for a massive fail. |
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07-03-2012, 01:55 AM | #23 | ||||
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On a simple small server RAID is not necessary if you have the added reliability of SSD. Simply have Acronis do an image on another drive,in real time, then do differential image backups (even over the internet if you like.) Certainly for the home user (as is the OP), and who the advice was aimed at, it would be a good low cost option rather than RAID. |
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07-03-2012, 07:34 AM | #24 | ||||
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Bottom line, don't ditch RAID if your data is important and you're running SSD's. |
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07-03-2012, 10:04 AM | #25 | |||||
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I haven't seen any serial SCSI SSD drives yet.... Guarantee you if it has a connector it could be zapped from a centimetre away with an ESD charge it's 10kv per cm. Remember that as you get zapped just before you've pressed the elevator button next time. Yeah zero is a "big" number but there's also a problem when you say zero risk with hot swap..... (sorry couldn't resist that one) Quote:
In some cases never fixed at all. Quote:
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07-03-2012, 10:24 AM | #26 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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07-03-2012, 03:05 PM | #27 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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getting a little off topic ?
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07-03-2012, 03:29 PM | #28 | |||
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07-03-2012, 04:31 PM | #29 | ||||
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Both my home machines have OCZ VII 120GB drives in them.
One is the misses machine; Outlook/Office, Facebook and general web duties. Mine is a gamer toy with the SSD having only the OS. Games are on a 600GB Raptor and apps on a 2TB WD Black. I've heard all the arguments before and having used the two I have now for 12 + months I'd be happy to go again. Are they a must? - Ah no. Cost v's Speed V's size will see them with a big cross against them for the average home PC user.
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07-03-2012, 09:42 PM | #30 | ||
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Not sure why you would use SSD in a small office server. A SAS drive will have more throughput for your network anyway, so if you're sucking data off the machine then network will be the bottleneck.
For high performance servers (Database) SSDs have very limited applications. Ours use delayed write to the drives though battery backed cache. Write performance of these devices is not up to scratch yet. For home computing, using SSD is fine if you are aware of the limitations and possible problems with failure. SSD will become mainstream soon enough. I still prefer round spinny things currently.
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