Ericmopar wrote:I'm curious, are there 4 things pluged into those SATA ports?
It says Maximum SATA Mode G3, which should be SATA III. The other ports may be running slower because slower drives or devices might be plugged into them.(IE older SATA II devices)
In any case, if you're installing the OS on the new SSD, then it should be whatever port the manual says to use for the C: / OS drive. Usually that's SATA port 0 or 1.
If it's a drive strictly for the games and data, then it can go on any SATA port controlled by the Intel chipset. The intel chipset will find it and adjust automatically to the device's speed.
Eric:
Okay - that's it.
Here's what I have plugged into the SATA ports:
Seagate Barracuda 1 TB - boot drive and programs other than games. I have this partitioned into C:, D: recovery drive, and G: Data Drive.
Western Digital WD Blue 1 TB - backup drive. This is the device showing SATA 3 capability.
Western Digital Velociraptor - 500 GB game drive, including TS2015 and Run 8
Philips DVD +-RW - this must be the SATA 1 device.
I bought the SSD for the train simulator programs. I know there's a good chance of getting the same results as with the Velociraptor, but that's OK. I was an early adopter of SSD technology, and want to give it another shot. I had a Kingston SSD that stopped working just when I needed the computer for my work.

Personally, I wouldn't recommend an SSD for use other than as a boot and gaming drive.
Question - If I use the fourth SATA input for the SSD, where would I plug the DVD into? Do I need a PCI controller card?
Rob
