
Sounds like a great upgrade.SSD - OCZ Vertex Plus 120 sata ii (W7 Pro installed, might reinstall with home premium seeing how I realy don't need XP mode like I thought I would)
Dell Laptop d-820 (96' ish designed for XP) Centrino Duo 1.6 4 gigs ddr2
Processor 4.6
Ram 4.6
Graphics 3.5 / 3.2
Hard Disk 6.9
Boot time 31 seconds. Shutdown time 5-6 seconds.
Note; Laptop used mostly at camp off grid solar power, (12v -to- 19.5v converter). With the SSD the total avg power draw is about 1/3 less amp. DC 2.5 before, avg 1.7 with ssd, keep in mind this is not a high end laptop even in it's day. Ment for business jazz. I mainly use it to run a few spreadsheets, track solar info, dvd player, view photo's etc.
My Honda minivan is "near" as fast as a Porsche 911 Turbo S.
"PorscheSSD there is no substitute."
:roflmao:Ah now you have me at a disadvantage there mate as I don't quite get what that means. Is it because I am running an old machine with DDR2? or the way it is set up in the BIOS or something?John, the Sandisk is rated at 550/510 but that's SataIII. Sata II I would think, would be faster than that.
Ok yes I was just curious essenbe I cannot find any ref to what the machine supports except that the machine CPU may run a 64bit 7 which I think I might get because the board I originally put the OEM on is defunct and I am getting the "warning" for that OEM (32bit) I used then and now have flipped it into the laptop so unless M$ take pity on me I shall have to get another.If you have DDR2 memory, I can just about assure you, you do not have sataIII. Sata is the Interface, sataIII is 6 Gb/s and sata II is 3 Gb/s. It's just a faster interface, but it doesn't make that big a difference. I would think you have it in AHCI mode in BIOS.

Thanks Wolfgang yep the machine is five years old now and as you say the performance is that much faster its scary. The old Vista set up was areal slow coach of a thing so it makes a good backup for my main laptop.John, you are OK. Given your base hardware, that's all you can expect.
What Steve is saying pertains to a more modern sata interface (that you do not have). But since it gives you a significant performance improvement over the old HDD, you should be happy.
If you have DDR2 memory, I can just about assure you, you do not have sataIII. Sata is the Interface, sataIII is 6 Gb/s and sata II is 3 Gb/s. It's just a faster interface, but it doesn't make that big a difference. I would think you have it in AHCI mode in BIOS.
What Steve alluded to is that if John had a board that only supports DDR2, It does not have any SATA III ports. SATA II is associated with older boards.If you have DDR2 memory, I can just about assure you, you do not have sataIII. Sata is the Interface, sataIII is 6 Gb/s and sata II is 3 Gb/s. It's just a faster interface, but it doesn't make that big a difference. I would think you have it in AHCI mode in BIOS.
Just to be clear on this,
What is being alluded to here is that SATAll is usually associated with the newer motherboards that use DDR3 memory, whereas the older "DDR2" motherboards didn't utilize SATAlll interfaces. They're not related, it's just one way to tell look at features associated with a part.
Example - If someone says they have 8gig of RAM, I can infer they have a 64-bit OS as opposed to a 32-bit.
If you have DDR2 memory, I can just about assure you, you do not have sataIII. Sata is the Interface, sataIII is 6 Gb/s and sata II is 3 Gb/s. It's just a faster interface, but it doesn't make that big a difference. I would think you have it in AHCI mode in BIOS.
Just to be clear on this,
What is being alluded to here is that SATAll is usually associated with the newer motherboards that use DDR3 memory, whereas the older "DDR2" motherboards didn't utilize SATAlll interfaces. They're not related, it's just one way to tell look at features associated with a part.
Example - If someone says they have 8gig of RAM, I can infer they have a 64-bit OS as opposed to a 32-bit.
What Steve alluded to is that if John had a board that only supports DDR2, It does not have any SATA III ports. SATA II is associated with older boards.

Just to be clear on this,
What is being alluded to here is that SATAll is usually associated with the newer motherboards that use DDR3 memory, whereas the older "DDR2" motherboards didn't utilize SATAlll interfaces. They're not related, it's just one way to tell look at features associated with a part.
Example - If someone says they have 8gig of RAM, I can infer they have a 64-bit OS as opposed to a 32-bit.
What Steve alluded to is that if John had a board that only supports DDR2, It does not have any SATA III ports. SATA II is associated with older boards.
I'm sorry, but I thought that's what I said :huh:
I guess it's your way of clarifying what I said![]()
