Best way to arrange drives on IDE cables?
- IronMonkey
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Best way to arrange drives on IDE cables?
Hi everyone.
I have just bought a new hard drive to go into my PC, and it suddenly hit me that I am not absolutely positive which is the best way to set up the IDE cables with my drives.
I had a read around on the Internet and found some very conflicting opinions so I thought I'd ask on here before I install it.
Currently I have installed:
IDE1 Master - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE1 Slave - Nothing
IDE2 Master - LG DVD-RAM drive
IDE2 Slave - LG DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive
I have read on some sites that it is best to separate hard drives onto different cables so that when copying from one to the other, there is more available bandwidth, which makes sense.
But I have also read that if you put a hard drive and an optical drive on the same cable that the cable only allows the hard drive to run at the slower speed of the optical device in order to not create problems, which kind of makes sense but I don't know how much truth there is in that.
Also, I have read that 40-pin cables have master in the middle and slave on the end, but it is apparantly the other way round for 80-conductor wires. Is there any truth in that?
So in summary, I have 2 Maxtor hard drives (120GB & 160GB), both 7,200rpm & both with 8MB cache, and both capable of ATA133 transfer speeds, along with 2 LG optical drives. I would like to know the best way to connect the drives.
Thanks for any help / advice...
I have just bought a new hard drive to go into my PC, and it suddenly hit me that I am not absolutely positive which is the best way to set up the IDE cables with my drives.
I had a read around on the Internet and found some very conflicting opinions so I thought I'd ask on here before I install it.
Currently I have installed:
IDE1 Master - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE1 Slave - Nothing
IDE2 Master - LG DVD-RAM drive
IDE2 Slave - LG DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive
I have read on some sites that it is best to separate hard drives onto different cables so that when copying from one to the other, there is more available bandwidth, which makes sense.
But I have also read that if you put a hard drive and an optical drive on the same cable that the cable only allows the hard drive to run at the slower speed of the optical device in order to not create problems, which kind of makes sense but I don't know how much truth there is in that.
Also, I have read that 40-pin cables have master in the middle and slave on the end, but it is apparantly the other way round for 80-conductor wires. Is there any truth in that?
So in summary, I have 2 Maxtor hard drives (120GB & 160GB), both 7,200rpm & both with 8MB cache, and both capable of ATA133 transfer speeds, along with 2 LG optical drives. I would like to know the best way to connect the drives.
Thanks for any help / advice...
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tom2681
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I don't agree with that.I have also read that if you put a hard drive and an optical drive on the same cable that the cable only allows the hard drive to run at the slower speed of the optical device
I think it's better to have one hard-drive on each cable to maximise the bandwidth.
Both my optical drives are slaves.
Both my hard-drives are masters.
I'd recommend:
IDE1 Master - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE1 Slave - LG DVD-RAM drive
IDE2 Master - 160GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE2 Slave - LG DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive
Assuming that the 120gb will be C: and assuming that you use the DVD/CDRW drive more often than the DVD-Ram drive.
Because in my experience it is best to have the 2 most used devices on different cables.
Example: For watching a dvd, it's better to have the Hard-drive in IDE 1 and the DVD-drive in IDE 2.
Just my 2 cents.
I used to be "the man who loves the movies you hate".
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Toge
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- IronMonkey
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Yeah, I thought that sounded a bit stupid...Tom2681 wrote:I don't agree with that.I have also read that if you put a hard drive and an optical drive on the same cable that the cable only allows the hard drive to run at the slower speed of the optical device
That was exactly what I was thinking - I just wanted to make sure before I did it so that I'm not unknowingly slowing my system performance down for no reason.Tom2681 wrote:I think it's better to have one hard-drive on each cable to maximise the bandwidth.
Both my optical drives are slaves.
Both my hard-drives are masters.
I'd recommend:
IDE1 Master - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE1 Slave - LG DVD-RAM drive
IDE2 Master - 160GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE2 Slave - LG DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive
Assuming that the 120gb will be C: and assuming that you use the DVD/CDRW drive more often than the DVD-Ram drive.
Because in my experience it is best to have the 2 most used devices on different cables.
I do use the DVD/CD-RW more than the DVD-RAM drive so it does make sense to connect them the way suggested.
Thanks!
Toge, what do you mean by other drive as IDE1 Slave? The other hard drive? Wouldn't having both hard drives on the same cable reduce available bandwidth?Toge wrote:IDE1 Master - Your drive which you will windows will be installed in
IDE1 Slave - Your other drive
IDE2 Master - Your drive which you will use mostly for reading
IDE2 Slave - DVD Burner
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gojensen
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- IronMonkey
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Well, I have 2 IDE ports and 4 IDE devices. My motherboard (ASUS A7N8X-E Deluxe) does have 2 SATA ports but I'm not using them, simply because I don't have any SATA hard drives.
When I bought the motherboard and 120GB hard drive a while ago, SATA was in its infancy & I had heard that there were a lot of people having problems with it, so I decided to play it safe and go for a IDE hard drive.
I'm going to try Tom2681's advice later tonight and see how it goes...
When I bought the motherboard and 120GB hard drive a while ago, SATA was in its infancy & I had heard that there were a lot of people having problems with it, so I decided to play it safe and go for a IDE hard drive.
I'm going to try Tom2681's advice later tonight and see how it goes...
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- bradavon
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I second this assuming the 120GB is your master drive? and you use your DVD-RAM as your main Reader? The latter because I find it nicer to have this as E: and the least important drive as F: .Tom2681 wrote:I'd recommend:
IDE1 Master - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE1 Slave - LG DVD-RAM drive
IDE2 Master - 160GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133
IDE2 Slave - LG DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive
I wouldn't recommend putting the two CD/DVD drives on the same IDE chain as copying from one CD/DVD to another has a large affect on performance if it needs to go between drives on the same chain.
I'm guessing it should be:
IDE1 Master - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133 (C drive)
IDE1 Slave - LG DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive (E drive)
IDE2 Master - 160GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache ATA133 (D drive)
IDE2 Slave - LG DVD-RAM drive (F drive)
Personally I have:
SATA1 - 120GB Maxtor 7,200rpm 8MB Cache SATA
SATA2 - Unused
IDE1 Master - Liteon DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive
IDE1 Slave - Unused
IDE2 Master - Liteon DVD-RW/DVD+RW/CD-RW drive
IDE2 Slave - Unused
SATA is great for four reasons:
1. It's faster
2. It completely frees up your IDE channels
3. The whole idea of slave drives is really messy and effects performance
4. The connection is smaller/nicer
When you upgrade do. You're now using drives on a slave chain when you A: don't need to, B: are getting slower hard drives and C: slower performance generally speakingIronMonkey wrote:Well, I have 2 IDE ports and 4 IDE devices. My motherboard (ASUS A7N8X-E Deluxe) does have 2 SATA ports but I'm not using them, simply because I don't have any SATA hard drives.
It's the SP2 syndrome I'm afraid. A handful of people have problems and everyone avoids it. The fact is they're faster.IronMonkey wrote:When I bought the motherboard and 120GB hard drive a while ago, SATA was in its infancy & I had heard that there were a lot of people having problems with it, so I decided to play it safe and go for a IDE hard drive.
When I set mine up I had two problems:
1. I didn't realise it's recognised as a SCSI device in the BIOS and wondered why the Primary bootup device only lets me select floppy or CD. I set the SCSI correctly and it booted fine
2. The second was a bit more tricky. When I installed XP I had to put in a floppy disk with third party drives to recognise the SATA interface.
The problem is the option to put a third party disk in is right at the start and it will only let you choose floppy disk. Of course I only got a driver CD. I don't know what I would've done if I hadn't had an old PC still working to browse the web/put the files on to floppy disk.
This I'm sure will be fixed properly in the next release of Windows.
You've got a good point. I never really thought of it that way.Tom2681 wrote:Because in my experience it is best to have the 2 most used devices on different cables.
I'd probably still switch them as it's nicer to have your main CD/DVD driver in an earlier letter. I don't use mine all that often anyway.
There is logic behind it but I think it's mainly people guessing.IronMonkey wrote:But I have also read that if you put a hard drive and an optical drive on the same cable that the cable only allows the hard drive to run at the slower speed of the optical device in order to not create problems, which kind of makes sense but I don't know how much truth there is in that.
I've never found it actually effects performance and besides why would your uber fast hard disk suddenly become the speed of a CD/DVD drive?
I believe that is what Toge means and he therefore subscribes to the above philosophy.IronMonkey wrote:Toge, what do you mean by other drive as IDE1 Slave? The other hard drive? Wouldn't having both hard drives on the same cable reduce available bandwidth?
Tom and I don't. Toge you're out voted
As it's a secondary drive it should really have been SATA. The "only" problems I know of are where people are using them as boot drives.IronMonkey wrote:I have just bought a new hard drive to go into my PC, and it suddenly hit me that I am not absolutely positive which is the best way to set up the IDE cables with my drives.
But fair enough you went good old IDE.
Nope that's a load of baloney. It's set by the jumper on the CD/DVD or HD.IronMonkey wrote:Also, I have read that 40-pin cables have master in the middle and slave on the end, but it is apparently the other way round for 80-conductor wires. Is there any truth in that?
Personally I've "always" put my master on the last IDE channel and the slave on the middle channel but that's really because I prefer how it looks.
EDIT: OR at least I'm 90% sure it's solely set by the jumper. Like I said on all IDE (40 and 80) I've put the master last and the slave in the middle and it's always worked for me. The bios has reported each as they should.
Last edited by bradavon on 13 Jul 2005, 23:23, edited 3 times in total.
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tom2681
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Read the first part of your previous message.
You tried writing "e: )" , "c: )" , etc... but instead ": ) " was interpreted as a smiley.
You tried writing "e: )" , "c: )" , etc... but instead ": ) " was interpreted as a smiley.
I used to be "the man who loves the movies you hate".
Now I'm just "that weird french guy with a cat avatar who comes to BnB once a year for no reason and then disappears again".
Now I'm just "that weird french guy with a cat avatar who comes to BnB once a year for no reason and then disappears again".
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gojensen
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- bradavon
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- IronMonkey
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- IronMonkey
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Yeah, I've got some longer 80-wire cables. I know about the whole 40 / 80-wire issue. I don't agree about drives that don't support 80-wire still being more efficient on those cables - they have no way of taking advantage of them.
By the way, all IDE cables are 40-pins, regardless of whether there are 40 or 80 wires inside...
I just hope these new 60cm cables are long enough when I try them out tonight, otherwise I'll have to buy some 90cm cables from the Internet, which I don't really want to do because there will then be a lot of excess cable inside my PC case...
By the way, all IDE cables are 40-pins, regardless of whether there are 40 or 80 wires inside...
I just hope these new 60cm cables are long enough when I try them out tonight, otherwise I'll have to buy some 90cm cables from the Internet, which I don't really want to do because there will then be a lot of excess cable inside my PC case...
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- bradavon
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You reckon?IronMonkey wrote:Yeah, I've got some longer 80-wire cables. I know about the whole 40 / 80-wire issue. I don't agree about drives that don't support 80-wire still being more efficient on those cables - they have no way of taking advantage of them.
I really meant in hindsight that the 80 wire cable is better quality.
Typo.IronMonkey wrote:By the way, all IDE cables are 40-pins, regardless of whether there are 40 or 80 wires inside...
Actually wasn't the original IDE less than 40 pins? 8)
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Toge
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gojensen
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not entirely correct... though I don't have a system at HAND to prove this - but if memory serves me correct I noticed a large performance hit with 2 IDE drives on the same channel during intensive disc access simultaneously from both discs even WITH an 80 pin cable... the logic behind this being that the channel is run by 1 "bus/chip" and has to r/w from drive 1 then drive 2 in order not simultaneously...
Though this may not be apparent in regular use, but say while I was generating a 15gig video file to drive 1 from large hunks of files on drive 2 - it did slow down...
Though this may not be apparent in regular use, but say while I was generating a 15gig video file to drive 1 from large hunks of files on drive 2 - it did slow down...
So long, and thanks for all the fish!
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Toge
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Asked around on DVDF...
"doesnt the IDE work to the slowest device, so the HDD will only use the speed of the optical device interface?
I have always thought HD on one IDe and optical on the other?
I have an old KT7a-Raid and have 1 device per IDE."
"I read the same thing and the HDD goes down to the same UDMA mode at the optical drive.
I need to sort my IDE channels out as both of my HDD's and DVD got stuck on Multi Word DMA. It is the slowest DMA mode and happened since replacing my motherboard."
"yes, if you have an optical drive and hd on the same channel it will only work at the speed of the lowest device, so i'd always advise putting the opticals on the same channel so they don't slow down the hard drives."
So I was right
Huzzah! 1-0 to me!
http://www.thedvdforums.com/forums/show ... p?t=378128
"doesnt the IDE work to the slowest device, so the HDD will only use the speed of the optical device interface?
I have always thought HD on one IDe and optical on the other?
I have an old KT7a-Raid and have 1 device per IDE."
"I read the same thing and the HDD goes down to the same UDMA mode at the optical drive.
I need to sort my IDE channels out as both of my HDD's and DVD got stuck on Multi Word DMA. It is the slowest DMA mode and happened since replacing my motherboard."
"yes, if you have an optical drive and hd on the same channel it will only work at the speed of the lowest device, so i'd always advise putting the opticals on the same channel so they don't slow down the hard drives."
So I was right
http://www.thedvdforums.com/forums/show ... p?t=378128
- bradavon
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That's not conclusive.
It's one of those things where you have to make your own mind up as you'll find as many people who say one thing as the other.
Personally I completely disagree with that statement.
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The use of the acronym HDD is really starting to piss me off. You never saw it up until a few years ago when HD Recorders came out and decided it's the right acronym to use.
It stands for Hard Disk Drive which is the same as daying Hard Disk or Hard Drive. If we're going to repeat ourselves as a course of action we may as well all say I'm going to drive my CA (Car Automobile). Saying Car or Automobile makes just as much sense.
HD means either Hard Drive or Hard Disk you don't need to add the second D which just makes it look stupid.
It's one of those things where you have to make your own mind up as you'll find as many people who say one thing as the other.
Personally I completely disagree with that statement.
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The use of the acronym HDD is really starting to piss me off. You never saw it up until a few years ago when HD Recorders came out and decided it's the right acronym to use.
It stands for Hard Disk Drive which is the same as daying Hard Disk or Hard Drive. If we're going to repeat ourselves as a course of action we may as well all say I'm going to drive my CA (Car Automobile). Saying Car or Automobile makes just as much sense.
HD means either Hard Drive or Hard Disk you don't need to add the second D which just makes it look stupid.
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gojensen
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Err, I have a HDD secondary master running UltraDMA5 and a DVD-burner as secondary slave running UltraDMA2. Meaning they run at different speed EVEN though they are on the same cable. Furthermore, I have an exact same type drive running solo as HDD primary master - and speedcomparisons between them show no difference in speed.
As for asking people on the internet for help like this? Don't. There are a lot of people out there that have heard something once or formed a personal opinion based on not-so-hard-facts that are very willing to present this as truth or hard-fact.
And certainly on a non-technical forum like DVDForums. This would be better answered by someone over at TomsHardware - but again, you do not know WHO answers you. I'm pretty confident in what I'm saying since I've been working with this kind of "crap" (computers) since '85 and I currently work as an IT Engineer... Then again, I know for a fact that there are drives and controllers (more specifically older units) that can't manage to do what my system does - and thus falls back to "safe mode" when mixed with certain other drives/controllers.
As for HDD acronyms - I've seen it used since the early 90s. It's not new. It may be even older - perhaps to seperate it from other names like Winchester Drives... and saying hard disk drive is not redundant as "hard disk" describes the physical method of storing data while drive suggests it's a complete unit, as opposed to hard disk platter which is one (of maybe several) disks that make up a complete drive. If that makes any sense. If I'd want to get pissed off there's a lot of worse thing out there on planet earth to get pissed off at than the HDD acronym
As for asking people on the internet for help like this? Don't. There are a lot of people out there that have heard something once or formed a personal opinion based on not-so-hard-facts that are very willing to present this as truth or hard-fact.
And certainly on a non-technical forum like DVDForums. This would be better answered by someone over at TomsHardware - but again, you do not know WHO answers you. I'm pretty confident in what I'm saying since I've been working with this kind of "crap" (computers) since '85 and I currently work as an IT Engineer... Then again, I know for a fact that there are drives and controllers (more specifically older units) that can't manage to do what my system does - and thus falls back to "safe mode" when mixed with certain other drives/controllers.
As for HDD acronyms - I've seen it used since the early 90s. It's not new. It may be even older - perhaps to seperate it from other names like Winchester Drives... and saying hard disk drive is not redundant as "hard disk" describes the physical method of storing data while drive suggests it's a complete unit, as opposed to hard disk platter which is one (of maybe several) disks that make up a complete drive. If that makes any sense. If I'd want to get pissed off there's a lot of worse thing out there on planet earth to get pissed off at than the HDD acronym
So long, and thanks for all the fish!
- bradavon
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What would it be if we're talking about the physical method of storing data in an incomplete unit then? What would be classified as an incomplete unit?"hard disk" describes the physical method of storing data while drive suggests it's a complete unit
I've been working in the IT field and with IT since 1990 and have never heard the two being used that way before.
Both to my understanding mean the 2.", 2.5" or 5.25" drive. True on platters but I wasn't talking about them.
So Iron Monkey shouldn't believe a word that you're saying then?gojensen wrote:As for asking people on the internet for help like this? Don't.
Personally I ask many people from many forums and:
A: Believe what sounds right to me
B: Believe who sounds like they know what they're talking about
