Question on ASUS SATA Ports

NthBelisarius

Honorable
Dec 2, 2013
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10,510
Hi, I have an ASUS Crosshair IV Formula motherboard (bought 2 1/2 years ago) with 6 SATA 6 Gb/s ports. These ports are split in the BIOS into 1-4 and 5-6, I was just wondering whether this actually means anything? I have an SSD on Port 5 and am having some trouble with read/write speeds - so I wondered if this is why?

Thanks.
 
Solution
Yes it does mean something. I don't think all your ports are 6Gb\s, could be only the first 4. So 5-6 are probably 3Gb\s. Most motherboards are like that.

In any case, I think the system gives higher priority to the first ones. Usually on a motherboard they will be labelled from SATA0 to SATA3 (instead of 1-4, because they start to count from 0).

You should always connect your most important device (in this case your SSD containing your OS) on the first one (which should be labelled SATA-0). And then your secondary most important (for example a secondary HDD containing your data) could go on SATA-1. DVD burners require less performance and cannot achieve 6Gb\s anyways, so they should be connected in SATA ports 5 or 6.

Now if you...

MC_K7

Distinguished
Yes it does mean something. I don't think all your ports are 6Gb\s, could be only the first 4. So 5-6 are probably 3Gb\s. Most motherboards are like that.

In any case, I think the system gives higher priority to the first ones. Usually on a motherboard they will be labelled from SATA0 to SATA3 (instead of 1-4, because they start to count from 0).

You should always connect your most important device (in this case your SSD containing your OS) on the first one (which should be labelled SATA-0). And then your secondary most important (for example a secondary HDD containing your data) could go on SATA-1. DVD burners require less performance and cannot achieve 6Gb\s anyways, so they should be connected in SATA ports 5 or 6.

Now if you connected your DVD burner in SATA-0 and your SSD in SATA-5, just try to invert them and see if it's better.

Another thing to look at, to achieve better performance with SSD, check your BIOS to make sure SATA mode is set to AHCI. Note that if you change this you'll probably get a BSOD on reboot. Here's how to get around it without reinstalling Windows:

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/922976

 
Solution