Corsair Force GS 240GB SSD review

Memory (DDR4/DDR5) and Storage (SSD/NVMe) 367 Page 7 of 18 Published by

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Your SSD and choosing the right SATA controller

 

SATA Controllers

Before we start off with all benchmarks I wanted to quickly show you how important it is to connect your SSD towards the right controller on your motherboard. If you purchase a SATA3 SSD you want to connect it towards a SATA3 port. However, the motherboards use different controllers per motherboard, basically you have the Intel/AMD Chipset controllers, or 3rd party controllers added onto the motherboard like Marvell and ASMedia.

The 3rd party controllers are not bad at all, but never seem to reach the performance the native chipset controller can achieve. In this chapter we'll demonstrate that, have a peek -- all results on this page have been done with the very same Corsair Force GS SSD (240GB model).

Corsair Force GS

INTEL SATA2 - Now above we have connected the SATA3 SSD towards a SATA2 port (Intel) of the motherboard. Bandwidth is your main issue and as you can see, you'll never pass ~270 MB/sec. Use these ports for your optical drives and HDDs.

Corsair Force GS

Asmedia SATA3 - In the above example we connected the SSD towards a proper SATA3 post, this port however is managed by a 3rd party controller from ASMedia. Albeit we have a good performance increase over the SATA2 port, we still run into a bottleneck as this controller does not have enough breathing space for the SATA3 SSD. Granted -- 375Mb/sec is obviously excellent performance -- but high-end SSDs simply can go faster.

Corsair Force GS

INTEL SATA3 - Once we connect the SSD to the native Intel SATA3 port, that's where things increase indefinitely as the SSD is freed up from any bottlenecks and bandwidth issues. We now has passed the 500 MB/sec.

So our advise is simple -- should you be in the market for a SATA 3 SSD then we absolutely prefer the performance of the Intel Series 6 or 7 (H67/P67/Z68/X79/H77/Z77) integrated SATA 6G controller over anything else available in the market.

The new Marvell and Asmedia controllers also offer good performance, albeit still 20%~25% slower then Intel's controllers.

When you install an SSD then make sure you run your drive in AHCI mode, it does make a significant difference in performance.

But what is SATA 3 (6Gbps)?

SATA3 is the latest revision of your SATA storage unit connectors, will increase the bandwidth on the SATA controller from 3 GBit/sec towards 6 GBit/sec. For your run of the mill HDD that is not really very important. But with the tremendous rise of fast SSD drives this really is a large plus.

For SATA2 typically we get 3000 Mbit/s : 8 = 375 MB/sec bandwidth minus overhead, tolerances error-correction and random occurrences.

SATA3 is doubling the bandwidth up, as such we get 6000 Mbit/sec : 8 = 750 MB/sec (again deduct overhead, tolerances error-correction and random occurrences) of available bandwidth for your storage devices. As you can understand, with SSDs getting faster and faster that's just a much warmed and welcomed increase of bandwidth.

Alright, let's dive into the performance benchmarks.

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