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Ein Übersetzungsproblem melden
no, I prefer regular SSD's cause they are more compatible across desktop systems and laptops
I was gonna get something like this for regular SSD's https://www.amazon.com/StarTech-Port-Express-eSATA-Controller/dp/B00952N2DQ
I have plenty of PCI-E slots I am good on that
I like the idea of putting linear games on a slower drive and open world games on the SSD btw that would help save SSD space.
Use motherboard sata for boot drives, use expansion card for secondary data drives.
get an x4 card they start around $35, will see the max bw on all ports
bandwidth will likely be limited depending on what CPU/Board he has anyway and how many PCI-E ports are being used, his board only having 2 SATA3 ports pretty much screams that
The other startech card that is just 2x internal Sata 3 connectors, PEXSAT32,Can hanlde SSD speeds and well as HDD speeds. It can also RAID and it comes with a Lifetime Warranty. I haven't tried the Raid function but I've had one for 2xHDD For almost a year now without any issues.
https://www.amazon.com/StarTech-com-Port-SATA-Express-Controller/dp/B003GS8VA4/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=pexsat32&qid=1572789077&s=electronics&sr=1-1
What could be using them that benefits more than using SATA3 for your SSDs?
If you don't want to utilize your existing SATA3 and aren't happy with the performance on SATA2, then I don't see what choice you have.
Well the biggest benefit for SSDs is the IOPS compared to HDDs. And even SATA3 SSDs aren't hitting 600MB/sec every time you access the disk. SATA2 will limit some performance but it might not be as crippling as you imagine. A SSD on SATA2 is still going to be 10x faster than a HDD on SATA3 at any rate.
Well most current systems have M2 and SATA3 and don't have to juggle SATA2, if we're talking about compatibility. I mean nothing wrong with SATA3, it's just a weird thing to have a preference for.