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How to determine which port offers the quickest performance for a SATA adapter on a Dell laptop?

How to determine which port offers the quickest performance for a SATA adapter on a Dell laptop?

V
Volerty
Junior Member
18
11-24-2016, 03:21 AM
#1
Hi
I have an old Dell Latitude E6400 laptop with 4GB RAM, two CPUs around the 3rd generation (memory not remembered), Nvidia TN137 graphics.
I’m planning to use it as a Plex server, NAS, seed box, and 24/7 video player.
I’m curious about the performance of the following ports: 3x mini PCIe, 1394, express card, and eSATA.
I’d like to run a 6TB SATA 3 HDD.
If everything works, I’m thinking about upgrading to a T9900 CPU and 8GB RAM.
I can’t afford two 3-inch 3TB drives because they’re not compatible with the native SATA 3 slots.
Any suggestions? Should I look for something else on eBay, like a mini PC?
V
Volerty
11-24-2016, 03:21 AM #1

Hi
I have an old Dell Latitude E6400 laptop with 4GB RAM, two CPUs around the 3rd generation (memory not remembered), Nvidia TN137 graphics.
I’m planning to use it as a Plex server, NAS, seed box, and 24/7 video player.
I’m curious about the performance of the following ports: 3x mini PCIe, 1394, express card, and eSATA.
I’d like to run a 6TB SATA 3 HDD.
If everything works, I’m thinking about upgrading to a T9900 CPU and 8GB RAM.
I can’t afford two 3-inch 3TB drives because they’re not compatible with the native SATA 3 slots.
Any suggestions? Should I look for something else on eBay, like a mini PC?

S
SausageFrog
Member
151
12-05-2016, 11:44 PM
#2
Any thoughts on this?
The guide mentions a GM45 chipset, which limits performance to SATA II speeds at 3 Gb/s.
My take on that.
S
SausageFrog
12-05-2016, 11:44 PM #2

Any thoughts on this?
The guide mentions a GM45 chipset, which limits performance to SATA II speeds at 3 Gb/s.
My take on that.

I
ItzOprayHD
Member
173
12-06-2016, 09:52 PM
#3
Oh wow, that's okay. Thank you a lot. Some of it ends up at the e-waste scrap yard.
I
ItzOprayHD
12-06-2016, 09:52 PM #3

Oh wow, that's okay. Thank you a lot. Some of it ends up at the e-waste scrap yard.

X
xXGoku997Xx
Junior Member
41
12-07-2016, 01:48 AM
#4
Sure, I can help with that. For a large 5-inch HDD, you should use the boot port for the OS and the NAS port for the boot system.
X
xXGoku997Xx
12-07-2016, 01:48 AM #4

Sure, I can help with that. For a large 5-inch HDD, you should use the boot port for the OS and the NAS port for the boot system.

R
Rosario17_
Posting Freak
897
12-13-2016, 10:33 PM
#5
"5 inch" ?
Or "3.5 inch"?
R
Rosario17_
12-13-2016, 10:33 PM #5

"5 inch" ?
Or "3.5 inch"?

K
KingKShah23
Junior Member
25
12-15-2016, 01:13 PM
#6
My response was a bit slow. The NAS is 5 inches, and I don't care about the boot type on drive selection.
PS. I realized that common desktop drives are 3.5 inches and laptops are 2.5 inches, so when I mentioned 5 inches it was actually referring to the 3.5-inch size.
😵
K
KingKShah23
12-15-2016, 01:13 PM #6

My response was a bit slow. The NAS is 5 inches, and I don't care about the boot type on drive selection.
PS. I realized that common desktop drives are 3.5 inches and laptops are 2.5 inches, so when I mentioned 5 inches it was actually referring to the 3.5-inch size.
😵