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#1
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#2
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I have a Sandisk SDP3B 1GB flashdisk card, of wich you can see a manual here: http://www.2080725.com/DATA/pcmcia%5...3b%20manual%22 I only get speeds of ~1MB/s out of that card, so I am wondering if the PC card ATA standard requires some sort of special card readers. I use the card in a TI-1225 Cardbus controller, standard on a Compaq Armada e500 laptop. This isn't the real life speed of such cards right? The manual says 16MB/s in burst mode. |
#3
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philippefimm... (AT) gmail (DOT) com <philippefimm... (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote: I have a Sandisk SDP3B 1GB flashdisk card, of wich you can see a manual here: http://www.2080725.com/DATA/pcmcia%5...2sdp3b%20manua... I only get speeds of ~1MB/s out of that card, so I am wondering if the PC card ATA standard requires some sort of special card readers. I use the card in a TI-1225 Cardbus controller, standard on a Compaq Armada e500 laptop. This isn't the real life speed of such cards right? The manual says 16MB/s in burst mode.The 16 bit PCMCIA bus typically maxes out around 1 to 1.5 MB/sec so what you're seeing is completely normal. I'm not sure how the 16 MB/s performance can be achieved; the document isn't specific enough. Maybe in True IDE mode when connected to an ATA/IDE controller, and not in PCMCIA-ATA mode. A kludge might be possible by using a high performance CardBus-to-CF adapter, and a CF-to-PCMCIA adapter. But it would probably be cheaper to just discard this device, and buy something that would fit into a high performance USB 2.0 card reader. -- Dave |
#4
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I find it a strange thing now that my PCMCIA sata adapter reaches peaks of over 10MB/s troughput, since the adapter is connected to the same 16bit PCMCIA bus. |
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A high performance PC-card reader would indeed be a solution it seems, but I only want one integrated into the laptop. Unfortunately, I didn't find one fitting in a multibay slot. |
#5
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philippefimm... (AT) gmail (DOT) com <philippefimm... (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote: I find it a strange thing now that my PCMCIA sata adapter reaches peaks of over 10MB/s troughput, since the adapter is connected to the same 16bit PCMCIA bus.The slot you have is a CardBus slot: it can accept 32-bit or 16-bit cards. The SATA adapter is a CardBus 32-bit card, not a 16-bit card. A high performance PC-card reader would indeed be a solution it seems, but I only want one integrated into the laptop. Unfortunately, I didn't find one fitting in a multibay slot.I'm not sure what you mean here. If you mean, you were looking for something that would not stick out of the laptop, one solution would be a high performance CardBus to CF or SD reader: http://www.dpreview.com/news/0310/03...ardbussdms.asp With a high speed CF or SD card, it looks like that should be in the 4-5 MB/sec range. Still not 16 MB/sec but better... and with much lower CPU utilization than the 16-bit PCMCIA route. -- Dave |
#6
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So my PCMCIA controller probably isn't capable of putting the flashdisk card in True IDE mode? |
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