F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop RST (Optane) offers faster performance compared to AHCI NVME SSDs, especially in read and write operations.

RST (Optane) offers faster performance compared to AHCI NVME SSDs, especially in read and write operations.

RST (Optane) offers faster performance compared to AHCI NVME SSDs, especially in read and write operations.

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dylan240sx
Junior Member
6
05-03-2016, 06:43 AM
#1
Hello, I just purchased an ASUS laptop equipped with a 512GB Intel SSD (Intel SSDPEKNW512GB). The read and write speeds are average. I’m thinking about swapping it for a Samsung 970 EVO Plus SSD. In the BIOS, the controller is set to Intel RST with Optane instead of AHCI by default. There’s no second drive available for Optane acceleration, which makes sense as the default. Would switching to AHCI improve performance or make it worse? I plan to reformat the system soon and wanted to ensure optimal settings regardless of the final SSD choice. Thanks!
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dylan240sx
05-03-2016, 06:43 AM #1

Hello, I just purchased an ASUS laptop equipped with a 512GB Intel SSD (Intel SSDPEKNW512GB). The read and write speeds are average. I’m thinking about swapping it for a Samsung 970 EVO Plus SSD. In the BIOS, the controller is set to Intel RST with Optane instead of AHCI by default. There’s no second drive available for Optane acceleration, which makes sense as the default. Would switching to AHCI improve performance or make it worse? I plan to reformat the system soon and wanted to ensure optimal settings regardless of the final SSD choice. Thanks!

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VitoSEXY
Posting Freak
797
05-04-2016, 08:56 PM
#2
I’m likely to retain your current drive unless it’s creating a problem; the SSD speed improvement won’t be apparent. RST allows you to utilize Optane and RAID arrays, which shouldn’t increase performance.
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VitoSEXY
05-04-2016, 08:56 PM #2

I’m likely to retain your current drive unless it’s creating a problem; the SSD speed improvement won’t be apparent. RST allows you to utilize Optane and RAID arrays, which shouldn’t increase performance.

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TheMars_
Junior Member
46
05-05-2016, 02:11 AM
#3
These components work together with SATA and won't affect NVME drives.
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TheMars_
05-05-2016, 02:11 AM #3

These components work together with SATA and won't affect NVME drives.

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I_Love_GcPVP
Junior Member
35
05-05-2016, 06:14 PM
#4
I understand. It's good to keep the current drive. I'm curious about the RST setting—why is it enabled even without options for an RST module or RAID SSD? If I switch back to AHCI during reinstallation, should that be fine? Are there any additional drivers required for RST mode? In the Intel 3rd generation era, you could enable AHCI with RST on top, but now it seems you must pick one option.
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I_Love_GcPVP
05-05-2016, 06:14 PM #4

I understand. It's good to keep the current drive. I'm curious about the RST setting—why is it enabled even without options for an RST module or RAID SSD? If I switch back to AHCI during reinstallation, should that be fine? Are there any additional drivers required for RST mode? In the Intel 3rd generation era, you could enable AHCI with RST on top, but now it seems you must pick one option.

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Nadroj9999
Member
91
05-08-2016, 10:36 AM
#5
I'm not familiar with RST, I've only used plain AHCI before.
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Nadroj9999
05-08-2016, 10:36 AM #5

I'm not familiar with RST, I've only used plain AHCI before.

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Riana711
Member
67
05-10-2016, 11:59 PM
#6
You placed the Intel SSD in RST mode, and everything seems to be working fine.
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Riana711
05-10-2016, 11:59 PM #6

You placed the Intel SSD in RST mode, and everything seems to be working fine.

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Destroyer2412
Member
57
05-17-2016, 05:53 PM
#7
You own an Acer Verizon X series model with serial number D18W2. When you switched it to AHCI using RST with Optane, the system stopped booting and you had to revert it back to RST with Optane. This is what happened.
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Destroyer2412
05-17-2016, 05:53 PM #7

You own an Acer Verizon X series model with serial number D18W2. When you switched it to AHCI using RST with Optane, the system stopped booting and you had to revert it back to RST with Optane. This is what happened.