Chris Boot wrote:
Some interesting developments!
I installed a fresh copy of Windows, and all the VIA and nVidia and so
on drivers. At some point during all this (a period of relatively heavy
disk IO), the computer seemed to crash and I rebooted it. It then
worked fine for a while, but during my perfmon testing it seemed to do
the same thing. This time I left it for a while and it did eventually
wake up again, so I'm guessing the controller is a bit fubared. Perfmon
did indeed show several dips down to or very close to 0 during the
write operation, with peaks up to 48 MB/sec, which is pretty
respectable. So, time to replace the brand-new controller I guess.
Now, do you think this is just my one particular controller card and a
simple return would fix the problem, or is it more likely a problem
with the whole range? It's an Innovision EIO SATA controller: http://
www.ivmm.com/eio/products/index.htm
Would it be a safer bet to go for the Adaptec controller of the same
variety? How reliable are they?
I frankly don't know. Maybe it's just one faulty controller,
connector or whatever. Maybe the card manufacturer screwed up
somewhere. I mean, the only course I took in electronics is
introductory digital circuits which used 74xx chips and push triggered
clock on a breadboard. What would I know about gigahertz signaling
error. :-p
Though, one thing I can say is majority of 311x controllers don't seem
to suffer from this problem. So, take your pick.
--
tejun
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