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  • Leader
Posted

BTW, JirenTV, do not "defragment" your SSD drive like you would do for a HardDrive.

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

203740895_PassmarkPC-HP.thumb.jpg.5547dc4ed695f38b41a1f3aebabc92a8.jpg

Laptop test

 

644340610_passmarkresultPC-FISSO.thumb.jpg.0e14a55f90b69f3eac62039b5de35dea.jpg

 

PC FIXED test

Edited by JirenTV
Posted

is it worth the investment  leno .. i always wanted to upgrade to ssd but my pc is so old it farts dust.

  • Haha 1
Posted (edited)

I can confirm that the limitation I had against 70% of the players was caused by the old hard disk at 7200 rpm and not caused by the connection delay.
after 3-4 days of testing on Enemy Territory I can confirm that the SSD, despite my motherboard only supports 3 GB / s, is definitely a joker in my favor, my accuracy has increased, the projectiles come out much faster from rifle, I do not know how to explain it, but I've definitely improved.

I emphasize that in this computer I have limits due to an old technology

example:
I only have 4 GB of RAM (DDR2)

 

I'm also trying, antivirus and firewall (ZoneAlarm)

and game optimizer (Razer Cortex)

and the enemy territory works very well

 

Edited by JirenTV
  • Leader
Posted
21 hours ago, JirenTV said:

I do not know how to explain it, but I've definitely improved.

I emphasize that in this computer I have limits due to an old technology

 

Perhaps your new SSD can handle some operating system background read/write processes more quickly.  

  • Like 1
Posted

Check these here to

https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-hardware/how-to-enable-ahci-for-ssd-in-windows-10/18ee0b43-47a9-4344-b0c8-1e8546be2c82

 

Skip after 12 and reboot if Jmicron is AHCI Controller enabled

 

You shouldn't have to modify the IDE settings in Bios just a reboot after the change in registery

 

This was the one I used for Windows 10 Pro 64bit Version  0.0.16299 Build 16299

 

Posted (edited)

1. While in Windows, press the Win+R keys to open Run, type regedit, and click/tap on OK to open Registry Editor.
2. If prompted by UAC, click/tap on Yes.
3. In the left pane of Registry Editor, browse to the key location below.


HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\iaStorV

4. In the right pane of the iaStorV key, double click/tap on the Start DWORD to modify it. (see screenshot above)
5. Type 0 (zero) for AHCI, and click/tap on OK.

6. In the left pane of Registry Editor, browse to the key location below.


HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\iaStorAV\StartOverride

7. In the right pane of the StartOverride key, double click/tap on the 0 DWORD to modify it. 
8. Type 0 (zero), and click/tap on OK.

9. In the left pane of Registry Editor, browse to the key location below.

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\storahci

 

10. In the right pane of the storahci key, double click/tap on the Start DWORD to modify it. (see screenshot above)
11. Type 0 (zero) for AHCI, and click/tap on OK.

12. In the left pane of Registry Editor, browse to the key location below to see if you have the StartOverride here. If you don't, then go to step 15 below. 
          HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\storahci\StartOverride

13. If you do, then, in the right pane of the StartOverride key, double click/tap on the 0 DWORD to modify it.
14. Type 0 (zero), and click/tap on OK.

15. When finished, close Registry Editor.
16. Boot the computer to your BIOS or UEFI firmware settings.

17. In your BIOS or UEFI firmware settings, enable AHCI, and save & exit to apply and restart the computer.

Note: These settings will vary per brand and model number of motherboard. Please read your motherboard manual for more specific details about how to change SATA settings for it.

18. When Windows starts, it'll automatically install AHCI drivers.

19.  When finished, you'll need to click/tap on Restart Now to restart the computer one last time.

 

Check if it helps. For further assistance you can contact Samsung support.

 

Thank you.

ssd.thumb.jpg.ebd5cd7bf75205eb0acf47fd154ccbc6.jpg

 

 

 

 

Edited by JirenTV
Posted

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services

 

this destination does not exist in my win 10

 

Posted

I would not change registry settings to change the disk driver from IDE to AHCI. Yes it will work- but my experience with that just leads to horrendous boot-times while Windows flip-flops on which device driver to use. Of course, your experience may vary depending on the drive controllers on the mobo. Not changing the settings via BIOS would result in the AHCI driver auto-swapping back to IDE or an inaccessible boot device bsod.

IMO the quickest guaranteed way is to just run a repair re-installation after changing the settings via BIOS.
 

49 minutes ago, JirenTV said:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services

 

this destination does not exist in my win 10

 

You're running regedit as an administrator? Maybe there's a permissions issue with the filesystem or something happened with an overzealous registry cleaner... This exists on all versions since 2K, so something is wrong if it's not there.
 

  • Like 1
Posted

Can you look in System Information from search box and tell us the Version of Windows 10 your using

 

Can you tell us if the system came with Win10 or upgraded from 7 or 8

 

And yes this was in the registry before windows 7 came out

  • Platinum VIP
Posted
9 hours ago, Xernicus said:

I would not change registry settings to change the disk driver from IDE to AHCI. Yes it will work- but my experience with that just leads to horrendous boot-times while Windows flip-flops on which device driver to use. Of course, your experience may vary depending on the drive controllers on the mobo. Not changing the settings via BIOS would result in the AHCI driver auto-swapping back to IDE or an inaccessible boot device bsod.

IMO the quickest guaranteed way is to just run a repair re-installation after changing the settings via BIOS.
 

You're running regedit as an administrator? Maybe there's a permissions issue with the filesystem or something happened with an overzealous registry cleaner... This exists on all versions since 2K, so something is wrong if it's not there.
 

Exactly. Those steps are outdated, for one,  people complained about Windows not booting and tbh,, I thought about it, but my machine goes from power off to fully booted in less than 30 seconds. I think I'm goood

Posted

2089758641_systeminformation.thumb.jpg.b1c5652d313f167726c865e123289335.jpg

 

 

I've just reinstalled from scratch, I must point out that there is no option to enable AHCI from the bios

the only options are these

IDE / SATA

disable
compatible
enhanced

 

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

Yes you are correct. I did some more digging and that motherboard does not allow for AHCI. It's not even hackable.

https://www.bios-mods.com/forum/Thread-Asus-P5KPL-SE-AHCI-Mod

 

There's people that are apparently hacking the P5K and P5KPL-AM to enable AHCI with custom bioses but its not an option for the P5KPL-SE. Sorry I didn't see this sooner.

  • Like 3

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