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How To Buy An SSD

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How quickly your operating system, programs, documents, and media files load and run is largely dependent on the performance of the device on which they’re stored. When you want it all to load fast, the SSD (solid state drive) is your best option. Here’s what you need to know to buy one for your desktop or notebook.

SSDs are composed of a controller chip and flash memory modules

SSDs are composed of a controller chip and flash memory modules

The SSD difference

The traditional hard drive is composed of discs, called platters, and a metal arm, called an actuator arm; the arm reads and writes data as it moves over the surface of the spinning platters. SSDs have no moving parts, relying instead on a controller chip and flash memory. SSDs are the newer storage option, and generally cost more per gigabyte than hard drives, but are capable of achieving significantly faster read and write speeds. These days, SSDs are almost exclusively sold in the 2.5-inch form factor, so if you plan to install one in your desktop, make sure your case can accommodate SSDs or get an SSD adapter. (Some SSDs include adapters.

In this three-drive RAID 0 array, the capacities of each 240GB drive combine to give you the equivalent of a single 720GB volume

In this three-drive RAID 0 array, the capacities of each 240GB drive combine to give you the equivalent of a single 720GB volume

The capacity problem

The SSD’s superior performance might tempt you to replace the hard drives in all your PCs and notebooks, but before you trash those old hard drives, consider that the average 120GB SSD costs roughly the same as a hard drive with 1TB (terabyte) of storage or more. Generally, 120GB or 240GB is sufficient for most notebooks, but if you use a lot of large files on your desktop PC, such as uncompressed images, videos, and audio files, then you’ll quickly fill up an SSD.

Hard drives just can’t keep up with SSDs when it comes to read/write performance, but hard drives are less expensive, per GB of storage

Hard drives just can’t keep up with SSDs when it comes to read/write performance, but hard drives are less expensive, per GB of storage

To solve the storage space constraints you’ll likely run into on the desktop, you could purchase multiple SSDs and create a RAID (redundant array of independent disks) 0 array. This effectively adds up the capacity of the separate drives and has the added benefit of being even faster than a single SSD. This is because the SSDs in a RAID 0 array can read and write data simultaneously. For instance, when you copy a file, the RAID controller in your computer splits it up into a series of smaller sections and copies a handful of those sections to every drive in the array at once. When finished, the array begins copying the next handful of sections simultaneously, and the process continues until the whole file is stored. The drawback to a RAID 0 array is that if any individual drive fails, so does the whole array. As a result, if there are four drives in the array, the storage is four times as likely to fail. There are other types of RAID, and those other types supply various levels of the redundancy that’s absent in a RAID 0 array, but none of those maintain the same capacity as the total of the individual drives.

A more feasible (and cost-effective) solution to the capacity problem is to use both an HDD and SSD in your computer. Due to HDD’s slower performance and higher capacity, use a large one as a repository for your photo, music, and video files and the programs you use less often. On the SSD, install the operating system and a handful of your most frequently-used applications to significantly speed your overall computing experience.

SATA deciphered

The SSDs currently available will have one of two types of interfaces: SATA 2 or SATA 3. The former has a peak throughput of 3Gbps; the latter supports twice that, up to 6Gbps. Keep in mind that to enjoy 6Gbps speeds, the SSD must be plugged into a SATA port on the motherboard that is capable of supporting that speed, and you must use cables that are designed for 6Gbps throughput. The ports, cables, and interface for SATA 2 and SATA 3 devices are identical and can be used interchangeably, but match the motherboard SATA type to the SSD’s interface type to get the best performance for your dollar.

This motherboard has its 6Gbps SATA ports clearly labeled

This motherboard has its 6Gbps SATA ports clearly labeled

 

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