Hey,
My WD SATA II 16mb Cache WD 4000 KS came yesterday, I did a speed test from Device Manager, and below are the results, are they normal for this type of drive?
• The Current transfer speed mode is Serial ATA Generation 2-3G
• Write Cacheing is enables
Test results (in million of bytes per second)
• Theroretical Limit - 300.0
• Burst Speed - 111.8
• Sustained Speed - 62.8
Also, I only just noticed this model doesn't have NCQ (shows how much I looked into my buy! ) Is this a big drawback?
And lastly, with WD, there is a tool you can download from the website called Data LifeGuard, which you can use to copy data from a folder on one HDD to another folder on a seperate HDD - I'm just wondering, is there a difference between using this tool and just normal windows copy and pasteing (because i did a mixture of both)
Thanks in advance.
Carl
My WD SATA II 16mb Cache WD 4000 KS came yesterday, I did a speed test from Device Manager, and below are the results, are they normal for this type of drive?
• The Current transfer speed mode is Serial ATA Generation 2-3G
• Write Cacheing is enables
Test results (in million of bytes per second)
• Theroretical Limit - 300.0
• Burst Speed - 111.8
• Sustained Speed - 62.8
Also, I only just noticed this model doesn't have NCQ (shows how much I looked into my buy! ) Is this a big drawback?
And lastly, with WD, there is a tool you can download from the website called Data LifeGuard, which you can use to copy data from a folder on one HDD to another folder on a seperate HDD - I'm just wondering, is there a difference between using this tool and just normal windows copy and pasteing (because i did a mixture of both)
Thanks in advance.
Carl