The Fresh Boot Test

Allow me to set the stage. You just turn on your PC. I’m talking about a well used PC with tons of applications and data on the drive, not a clean test image. The moment you hit the Windows desktop you go and fire up the three applications you need to start working with right away.

If you ever wanted to know why SSDs are so much better, this is your reason. I ran through that exact scenario on our SSD testbeds. As soon as I hit the Vista desktop I ran Internet Explorer, Adobe Photoshop CS4 and Pinnacle Studio 12; I waited for all three to load, in the case of Pinnacle Studio I waited for my HD video project to load before stopping the timer.

The results speak for themselves:

Everyone’s beloved posterchild, the Western Digital VelociRaptor took 41.2 seconds to fully launch all three applications. Normal hard drives will fare much worse. The Seagate Momentus 5400.6, a high performance 5400RPM notebook drive took another 30 seconds on top of the WD time.

Now look at the SSDs; the worst SSDs we’ve got launch these applications in half the time of the VelociRaptor. The Intel X25-M will load the apps in about 13 seconds, barely a second longer than how long it takes to run Pinnacle Studio alone on an idle machine.

A good SSD makes Vista usable. All of the background tasks are nothing for these drives. If you ever sit there at an idle desktop and hear Vista go to town on your hard drive, those are IO operations that will bring any normal drive to its knees - or at least keep it busy enough to make all other IO requests take much longer than they should.

The SSDs that are worth recommending all deliver anywhere from 2x to 40x the number of IOs per second for small, random file writes compared to the Raptor. It doesn’t matter how many Raptors you RAID together, you’ll never achieve this sort of performance.

PCMark Vantage Application Launch Times
Comments Locked

250 Comments

View All Comments

  • GlItCh017 - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    I just wanted to comment that the backstory portion to this article is simply the most interesting part to an article (or almost even an article inside the main article). On top of that, it is easily the most interesting article I have ever read simply because of that section. Really really must say that I enjoyed reading it!
  • radguy - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    I have been waiting for this one for a while and it was very informative. Thank you very much for it. I did pick up one of the patriot warp drives for my netbook. I was really happy until I installed avg free. So not running an antivirus on it anymore but I have drive image backup incase it goes bad. Overall pretty happy as it was only 80 bucks if I get my mir.
    I think I'm going to wait until windows 7 till I upgrade my primary desktop. 2 of those vertexs in raid 0 would be sweet though.
  • sleepeeg3 - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    They were one of the first SSDs you reviewed and they use their own controller. How does their random write performance compare to everything else out now?

    These reviews made me totally reassess the purchase of the two Samsungs I bought. I had no idea the random writes on the Samsung drives were so bad. Other reviews show the Samsung drives doing better or at least near the X25-M in write tests: http://www.techreport.com/articles.x/15433/6">http://www.techreport.com/articles.x/15433/6 However, those tests probably would have been somewhat sequential.
  • nubie - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    Grammatically awkward sentence on Page 21:

    "so if you own one of these drives - you owned a fixed version."

    The tense is incorrect (own/owned). I think "own a fixed version" is still awkward, perhaps "you have the fixed version", also the "so" may be superfluous. You can replace the ", so if" with a "; if". Here is how I might re-write the sentence:

    "The old firmware never shipped thanks to OCZ's quick acting; if you own one of these drives - you have a fixed version."

    (I am not an expert, so feel free to correct me if I am wrong.)


    Awesome article btw, thanks for setting me straight on SSD, I have been steering clear of them. I hope soon you can review SSD's and most are good to excellent. :)
  • Flyboy27 - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    This article has answered every question I've had regarding SSDs recently. Thanks Anand!
  • Flyboy27 - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    If a 120gb Vertex was around $250 I would get one yesterday. I suppose I can wait though.
  • 7Enigma - Thursday, March 19, 2009 - link

    For me, 2 60's or 2 80's for around that price and I'm sold. Want the Raid0.
  • kgwagner - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    I almost didn't read this article, as everybody and their brother seems to want to explain SSDs these days and most of the articles aren't much more than glorified press releases. But, this one truly took the drives to task and presented some valid information and explanations about the state of the art and where it needs to go. Kudos, Anand. Awesome show. Good job.
  • Mr Perfect - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    "Needless to say, there was some definite fallout from that review. I’m used to negative manufacturer response after a GPU review, but I’m always a bit surprised when it happens in any other segment."

    Obviously you can't make a business out of irritating manufacturers, but when there really are issues, the readers want to know about them. After all, that's why we come here!
  • gwolfman - Wednesday, March 18, 2009 - link

    You own Anand. Keep up the good work. I've seen you cited from many sites about the work you've done, in particular with SSDs. Best article I've read in months!

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now