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speed your hard drive
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 2
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this is my first post so i hope its usefull
and im gonna provide you guys alot of nice tweaks i tried
other than the boring ones
if u want to speed ur acces to ur hard drive
install System Mechanic Professional 7 and go to
increase performance and choose defragment hard drive
and in 3rd choice cutome choose options and in the end of the window
you will have two kind of defragmenting one is fast and one is called
low level defragment ,,, its very good defragmenting no joke
this kind of defragmenting can try to prevent fragments as possible
in future thus defragment can take between 30 min and 2 days
depending on ur fragment percentage ,, i had 27% it took 6 hours
but guys hardisk is faster sure you will enjoy it
any questions im ready.
haze
and im gonna provide you guys alot of nice tweaks i tried
other than the boring ones
if u want to speed ur acces to ur hard drive
install System Mechanic Professional 7 and go to
increase performance and choose defragment hard drive
and in 3rd choice cutome choose options and in the end of the window
you will have two kind of defragmenting one is fast and one is called
low level defragment ,,, its very good defragmenting no joke
this kind of defragmenting can try to prevent fragments as possible
in future thus defragment can take between 30 min and 2 days
depending on ur fragment percentage ,, i had 27% it took 6 hours
but guys hardisk is faster sure you will enjoy it
any questions im ready.
haze
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 2
Reputation:
Solved Threads: 0
I have not tried the utility you mentioned but, i make sure the fragmentation levels are under check on my drives, it helps keep the system from lagging and crippled performance.
Its a good practice to keep the drives healthy and refrain from storing unwanted programs, a faster drive = smoother system.
Its a good practice to keep the drives healthy and refrain from storing unwanted programs, a faster drive = smoother system.
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 25
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This is purely subjective, but i have found that my system seems more consistantly responsive if I install a remote page file - that being a second hard disk drive dedicated for page file use only.
Even internet page changing seems consistantly snappier - but I can not quote any benchmark results to back up this.
But makes sense if the page file is always at the fastest outer edge of the disk - and stays there, whereas windows seems to place it in the middle of a system c-drive.
But as I said - a subjective observation, over time.
Even internet page changing seems consistantly snappier - but I can not quote any benchmark results to back up this.
But makes sense if the page file is always at the fastest outer edge of the disk - and stays there, whereas windows seems to place it in the middle of a system c-drive.
But as I said - a subjective observation, over time.
> whereas windows seems to place it in the middle of a system c-drive.
In a single-drive system, you can easily get into the state of "swap a page out to disk, load a page of data for a program". This creates a hell of a lot of head movement. The middle of the disk is a compromise between transfer times and seek times (seek times take a lot longer).
Consequently, when you have two drives, with the swap on one drive and the data on the other, you can swap a page and read a page, and neither head moves anywhere.
In a single-drive system, you can easily get into the state of "swap a page out to disk, load a page of data for a program". This creates a hell of a lot of head movement. The middle of the disk is a compromise between transfer times and seek times (seek times take a lot longer).
Consequently, when you have two drives, with the swap on one drive and the data on the other, you can swap a page and read a page, and neither head moves anywhere.
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 25
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I agree - latency is greatly reduced
- also both i/o is controlled by separate host bus adaptors, like an array set.
System performance increase is noticable after launching an application and using the various functions.
But is not reflected in standard hdd benchmarking.
I use a cheap 9GB 10,000 rpm scsi drive attached to a pci host bus adaptor card.
(also sounds impressive when spooling up at system boot)
- also both i/o is controlled by separate host bus adaptors, like an array set.
System performance increase is noticable after launching an application and using the various functions.
But is not reflected in standard hdd benchmarking.
I use a cheap 9GB 10,000 rpm scsi drive attached to a pci host bus adaptor card.
(also sounds impressive when spooling up at system boot)
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