Intel Smart Response Technology Questions

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Hello am going to pick up an SSD for caching for my windows HDD. Is it possible to do this without a Re-install of windows?
Am looking at getting a 60GB SSD any recommendation for this type of setup?
I Understand I need to select raid Drive in BIOS, but at the moment I have it set to ahci mode if I switch this will windows fail to boot?

You might be also wondering why not just buy a bigger better SSD, it all comes down to the size and price for me. I need my 2TB windows drive and anything less then say 500GB wont do, and the price of a 500GB+ SSD is way out my budget.

Thanks
 
Yes caching will work,there's a reg tweak you do and then install raid drivers from asrock site,reboot/set to raid and then you can cache the hdd without reinstalling windows

Google on how to do the reg tweak to enable caching without reinstall
 
Yes caching will work,there's a reg tweak you do and then install raid drivers from asrock site,reboot/set to raid and then you can cache the hdd without reinstalling windows

Google on how to do the reg tweak to enable caching without reinstall

Thanks mate will check that out.
 
Yes caching will work,there's a reg tweak you do and then install raid drivers from asrock site,reboot/set to raid and then you can cache the hdd without reinstalling windows

Google on how to do the reg tweak to enable caching without reinstall

Looking at guide here and they dont say to restart??


If you already have W7 installed and do not want to reinstall do this:
1) Do not connect the caching SSD yet. First apply the following registry tweak:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Servic es\Iastorv
In the details pane, right-click "Start", and then click modify.
In the Value data box, type 0

This registry change enables the RAID driver in Windows.
2) Next install the raid driver.
3) Connect your caching SSD (While system is still booted???
4) Set up caching with RST util.
 
It doesn't explain very well its correct but DON'T reboot pc untill you've done the reg tweak and installed the drivers,then reboot,add ssd while pc is off,then set to raid in BIOS

If you reboot pc after just doing reg tweak n you forget to install drivers it will mess up your OS and you won't boot up,so you MUST do reg/install drivers before you reboot
 
It doesn't explain very well its correct but DON'T reboot pc untill you've done the reg tweak and installed the drivers,then reboot,add ssd while pc is off,then set to raid in BIOS

If you reboot pc after just doing reg tweak n you forget to install drivers it will mess up your OS and you won't boot up,so you MUST do reg/install drivers before you reboot

Thanks so real step is
1. Reg tweak
2. Install raid driver
3. power down, install SSD and switch on into BIOS and enable raid
4. Boot into windows and install SRT software and enable caching?

Thanks again mate
 
Just checking my Motherboard Drivers site and I think am stuck. The raid driver they offer is for install, when installing the OS :(


1. Copy the SATA RAID Driver from our website to your SATA HDDs. Unzip it, and copy all the files and folders to an empty diskette.

2. Make sure that the “SATA Operation Mode” option in BIOS setup is set to RAID mode.

3. Install Windows OS to your system. At the beginning of Windows setup, please press F6 and insert the SATA RAID Driver floppy diskette you just made.

4. Then you are allowed to select the required driver to install after your system reading the SATA RAID Driver floppy diskette.

5. After Windows OS installation, use the RAID tool in our support CD to configure RAID arrays under BIOS or Windows environment.
 
i think the corsair force gt is a good choice the crucial m4 is ok but it has poor write speeds on the 64gb drive
 
comes with mounting bracket too,ive had no issues at all with mine

Does it come with sata cable? If not am going to after buy one plus sata power extension cables.
The sata power cables that come with corsair HX850w are very bad designed, they come on one long strip and when you have 3 HDD plus this SSD its horrible to fit all power cables onto the drives.
 
Do you use Maximized mode with your SSD? Is it worth doing so, What happens if say the power went in the house not enough electricity will this damage files?
I reading you shouldn't use maximized mode because of risk to damaging files :eek: but if it was so bad why would Intel give you that option? lol
 
yeah i used maximised mode,all youd lose is whats temporarily stored on the ssd,you can rebuild it sometimes
 
yeah i used maximised mode,all youd lose is whats temporarily stored on the ssd,you can rebuild it sometimes

Dont like the word Sometimes :D What happens if you cant rebuild it? The files that are on SSD they just like backups of whats on the HDD so even if the files on SSD get damaged there, you still have them because there on HDD?

Thanks again mate you been great help.
 
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