Indeed crazy performace tho id love to test one of those babies.
Indeed crazy performace tho id love to test one of those babies.

Revodrive is unsuited for a system disk though. Very unstable I heard. I got an Agility II in my HTPC and a Force 3 in my system. The first Force 3 was broken but I had it replaced and now both work without any problems with windows on them.
I hear some MB have problems booting through it since its a PCI-E drive but im sure recent MB have np and should be ready for it. Its also mostly used in workstations where components have to be reliable so i doubt its unstable.
My friend personally had problems getting the Vertex 3 boot from the southbridge J-Micron controller on his Sandy Bridge mobo. He's now kinda weary of OCZ because of that.
Also, to whoever said that SSDs don't do much - I have a second generation OCZ Vertex from 2 1/2 years ago. After moving FFXIV to my SSD, I noticed significantly less stuttering as NPCs and PCs were loaded while I was entering towns, camps, etc. It really is worth moving your installation.
With the use of junctions/symbolic links, you can move your installation without having to uninstall and reinstall too.
Proud member of the "why the the heck are giant obnoxious images allowed in signatures" club.
Originally Posted by kensredemption
I'd rather play solo than play with a bunch of elitists.




Hi Bahn,
In layman's terms (sorry (^_^;, does this mean OCZ Vertex 3 SSDs are problematic in general? Or that it's potentialliy problematic only with regards to this "Sandy Bridge" config?
Thanks.
OCZ Vertex are the SDD with best reviews around the internet have one myself on a sandy bridge MB(asus p8z68-v pro) works wonders. Also OCZ been leading the SDD market for awhile.
To bahn
With a sandy bridge chipset you dont really need to use JMicron since the chipset(H61,H67,P67 and Z68) itself have atleast 4 SATA ports so unless yr driving 4+ HDD/SDD i wouldnt use the JMicron ports and even if you are running that amount of SDD/HDD use one of the intel chipset ports for the boot SSD.
Last edited by Zorlin; 12-24-2011 at 08:00 PM.

Just for your information: Most SSDs use exactly the same Flash Memory and exactly the same Sandforce Controller. The problems that occur are usually the mainboards fault(if the SSD is not broken in which case you should get it replaced right away).
And a good SSD really can remove the stuttering in town and other loading lags by 99% (it's not just the transfer speed but also the seek time which is only like 1/1000 of a normal HDD).


wasn't there some issues with the sf2000 controllers? not sure if that's been fixed yet. AFAIK intel drives still have the best reliability record, though the sf based drives are faster.
I wouldn't say they're all the "same", intel has their own controller, crucial uses marvell, and kingston has jmicron controllers etc.


All Kingston SSDs, at least in the past, have been rebranded Intel drives. Maybe that's different with the newest one, I haven't looked into it just yet. Actually their newest uses Intel Chips, but a SF controller.wasn't there some issues with the sf2000 controllers? not sure if that's been fixed yet. AFAIK intel drives still have the best reliability record, though the sf based drives are faster.
I wouldn't say they're all the "same", intel has their own controller, crucial uses marvell, and kingston has jmicron controllers etc.




Hi Zorlin, Coldfire,OCZ Vertex are the SDD with best reviews around the internet have one myself on a sandy bridge MB(asus p8z68-v pro) works wonders. Also OCZ been leading the SDD market for awhile.
To bahn
With a sandy bridge chipset you dont really need to use JMicron since the chipset(H61,H67,P67 and Z68) itself have atleast 4 SATA ports so unless yr driving 4+ HDD/SDD i wouldnt use the JMicron ports and even if you are running that amount of SDD/HDD use one of the intel chipset ports for the boot SSD.
Ah nice. ^^ OK, so great SSD with a newer Intel Motherboard / Chipset would be pretty safe / stable then?
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