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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:28 PM.
> Remember the fan controller sits in a 5.25" bay, I would put the fan controller in the topmost bay and the DVD writer just below it since the controller will have the most cables coming out.
(your setup will look better since your case is black :P)
> HDD/SSD spacing doesn't matter.
Rest is fine. There's no difference between installing Win 7 on an SSD or HDD, the installation process is exactly the same on the user end.Win 7 does it's own stuff in the background when it detects an SSD.
Don't worry about that stuff. Samsung SSD's come with a downloadable tool called Magician, it lets you optimize the SSD with the most important settings with a few clicks (disabling prefetch, etc). If you want to go crazy with optimizations/tweaks then this is the best guide:
http://thessdreview.com/ssd-guides/o...ation-guide-2/
Careful if going all the way through with that guide, it makes you do some risky stuff.
All that insurance/RMA stuff is completely up to you mate, I wouldn't know what to take.
Last edited by Xuvial; 2012-11-25 at 10:57 PM.
WoW Character: Wintel - Frostmourne (OCE)
Gaming rig: i7 7700K, GTX 1080 Ti, 16GB DDR4, BenQ 144hz 1440p
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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:28 PM.
I'd go with this guide instead because its more thorough: http://www.overclock.net/t/1156654/s...-for-ssds-hdds
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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:28 PM.
500R has a fan controller?? Holy crap I just looked, indeed it does! Hahahah neat.
WoW Character: Wintel - Frostmourne (OCE)
Gaming rig: i7 7700K, GTX 1080 Ti, 16GB DDR4, BenQ 144hz 1440p
Signature art courtesy of Blitzkatze
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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:28 PM.
That post and half of the regulars on this forum has few critical misunderstandings regarding SSDs
1: write limitations of SSDs are massively exaggerated, moving things like browser cache and other items that are accessed daily to a slow HDD is performance loss for your computer for no good reason
http://www.overclock.net/t/1013672/s...after-900000gb
2: keep pagefile on the SSD, never ever put it into HDD. That will only make your computer run slower again
http://www.overclock.net/t/1173789/p...ile-on-ssd-yes
Never going to log into this garbage forum again as long as calling obvious troll obvious troll is the easiest way to get banned.
Trolling should be.
8GB pagefile on a 128GB SSD consumes a lot of space especially since 8GB RAM is considered 'overkill'. As such, the pagefile might not be used often but still consume 8GB of space. This effect is even worse when you have people running 16GB RAM with 120GB SSDs. Your article was written over 3 years ago when 2-4GB RAM was the norm.
Some files do not need to be accessed quickly (eg. My Documents) where as others need to be accessed quickly (eg. Games/Windows). We prioritize things we care about and keep them on the SSD due to space, not write wear.
Last edited by yurano; 2012-11-26 at 12:09 AM.
How more you actually write to the SSD, how more you wear it. Pagefile is a big part of this. But honestly I have a Corsair Performance Pro 128GB with 16GB RAM with 4 games installed and pagefile is enabled, I didnt notice any performance drops over time and I have the SSD for almost a year I think.
Optimizing SSD is pointless, just keep AHCI enabled before installing windows and never ever defragment it or index it with Windows things. I noticed that my PC with that Intel AHCI driver (Intel rapid storage technology driver) was booting much faster than the default ahci driver from W7.
Just disable Hibernation if you don't use it which saves you like 8GB already.
Notice that I never said anything about shrinking pagefile, only moving, but on hindsight it looks like I should have to avoid nitpicking from random people. Yes, of course you should shrink it according to how much RAM you have, 1GB is about right with 8GB or more physical RAM, but never ever move it off the SSD. And ofcourse disable hibernation before you want to nitpick from that shit too.
It's bigger pain in the ass to move off things like My Documents than the few GB space saved as some braindead programs still use hardcoded file paths. Of course it's an option if you really need to recover that space, but it's usually not worth the hassle when prices of SSDs keep falling down so fast.
Never going to log into this garbage forum again as long as calling obvious troll obvious troll is the easiest way to get banned.
Trolling should be.
Or, you can keep it as 8GB and move it completely off your SSD. With 8GB of RAM, the OS doesn't actually use it very often.
You can keep \My Documents\ where it is if you're concerned about old games writing save files. Newer games seem to use the \Current User\My Documents\ address to access your saves.
For user folders \My Music\, \Downloads\, \My Pictures\ and \My Videos\ are the main culprits of SSD overuse. There are plenty of people with enormous music folders who can benefit from moving it off. \Downloads\ consumes a ton of space and is super write heavy. \My Pictures\ and \My Videos\ can consume a lot of space if you use it. None of these user folders require fast access times or read speeds and I doubt any of these folders are 'hardcoded' anywhere so these can all be 'optimized'.
Shrinking\disabling pagefile, disabling hibernation and moving user folders are all in the optimization guides you criticized. All of these are meant to reduce space consumption. It seems like you're the one with a misunderstanding of SSD optimization.
http://blogs.technet.com/b/markrussi...7/3155406.aspx
For the average gamer with 8GB or more of ram, the value is negative AND crash dumps are irrelevant.How Big Should I Make the Paging File?
Perhaps one of the most commonly asked questions related to virtual memory is, how big should I make the paging file? There’s no end of ridiculous advice out on the web and in the newsstand magazines that cover Windows, and even Microsoft has published misleading recommendations. Almost all the suggestions are based on multiplying RAM size by some factor, with common values being 1.2, 1.5 and 2.
Since the commit limit sets an upper bound on how much private and pagefile-backed virtual memory can be allocated concurrently by running processes, the only way to reasonably size the paging file is to know the maximum total commit charge for the programs you like to have running at the same time. If the commit limit is smaller than that number, your programs won’t be able to allocate the virtual memory they want and will fail to run properly.
So how do you know how much commit charge your workloads require? To optimally size your paging file you should start all the applications you run at the same time, load typical data sets, and then note the commit charge peak. Set the paging file minimum to be that value minus the amount of RAM in your system (if the value is negative, pick a minimum size to permit the kind of crash dump you are configured for).
Last edited by yurano; 2012-11-26 at 10:49 AM.
Last edited by vesseblah; 2012-11-26 at 12:02 PM.
Never going to log into this garbage forum again as long as calling obvious troll obvious troll is the easiest way to get banned.
Trolling should be.
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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:26 PM.
Honestly I find performance difference between SSD's irrelevant because you won't notice if one SSD is 50MB/s than another one. It might be 0.25sec a faster game loading which you won't notice unless you have a timer everytime up..
Reliability is rather more important for me and Intel SSD's ARE reliable.
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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:26 PM.
The Intel 330 240gb is solid for your purposes.
Anandtech gave it a positive review: http://www.anandtech.com/show/5817/the-intel-ssd-330-review-60gb-120gb-180gb/9 (and nobody argues with Anand when it comes to SSD's :P)
WoW Character: Wintel - Frostmourne (OCE)
Gaming rig: i7 7700K, GTX 1080 Ti, 16GB DDR4, BenQ 144hz 1440p
Signature art courtesy of Blitzkatze
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Last edited by Lychee3000; 2016-01-10 at 08:26 PM.