Many people
often hear the hard disk type SATA or PATA/ATA. What is the difference from the
actual SATA and PATA technology?
Before we
understand first the notion of PATA and SATA, both of which are based on of the
ATA (Advanced Technology Attachment), a standard used to connect hard disk,
CD-ROM, DVD-ROM drive on the computer.
PATA used to mention largely parallel ATA and SATA for Serial ATA:
PATA used to mention largely parallel ATA and SATA for Serial ATA:
PATA (Largely
Parallel ATA)
PATA harddrive
initially called ATA or IDE, but after the advent of SATA added landing strips
in front of words to tell the difference between PATA and SATA technology. The
Largely because their installation done in ATA largely parallel with other
device/IDEA.
PATA doesn't
have Hot Swappable capabilities, data cable needed reach 40 cable that makes it
judged impractical, as well as having a maximum interface cable length 18
inches (46 cm), but many of the products also are available on the market that
have a length of up to 36 inches (91 cm).
This limitation
makes the PATA interface are just as internal storage. This Interface also
experienced slow growth starting in 1994. UDMA 6 (133) or Ultra DMA 133 is a
breakthrough last issued in 2005 and from that point arguably PATA hard drive
development stops.
SATA (Serial
ATA)
SATA is PATA development
team, first released in 2002. SATA is defined as technology that is designed to
replace the ATA in total. Where a device is mounted on a single SATA ports, so
that the installation cable neater and less than PATA cables.
Use of NCQ
(Native Command Queuing) used in SCSI hard drive, as a result of mechanical
performance is also more efficient and keep the old hard drive into an older
(durable) and access data much faster than PATA. SATA uses encoding 8/10 bytes,
with the level of efficiency at 80%.
With NCQ SATA
technology, it is possible to interface external (eSATA) and hot plug without
leaving the facility to make a hard disk as a removable storage.
Some SATA
features are:
- SATA uses a line 4 which allows the cable signal is more concise and inexpensive compared to PATA.
- SATA to accommodate new features such as hot-swapping and native command queuing.
- The SATA drives can be plugged into the controller Serial-Attached SCSI (SAS) so that it can communicate with the same physical cable as native SAS disks, SAS disks, however, could not be plugged into SATA controllers.
SCSI (Small
Computer System Interface)
SCSI is widely
used for the connection in the Server and are also widely used by the Apple
device. SCSI has a wide variety of versions i.e. SCSI, Ultra-2 SCSI and Ultra-3
SCSI.
SCSI-1 has two
kinds of speed that works in asynchronous, i.e. 3.5 MB/sec or 5 MB/sec. Cable
length reaches six meters.
In 1989 a SCSI
version 2 was launched, in this version there are two variants i.e. Fast SCSI
has a speed of 10MBps and Wide SCSI has a speed of 8 MBps.
Then the
presence of SCSI version 3 has two variants, namely Ultra SCSI and Ultra Wide
SCSI.
And in 1997
launched Ultra-2 SCSI and has 2 variants, i.e. SCSI Ultra2 speeds of 40MBps and
has Wide Ultra2 SCSI has a speed of 80Mbps. both use cable reached 12 meters.
Then on Ultra-3 SCSI version has speed 160Mbps.
Hard disk SCSI
is used more for servers or systems which require very fast hard disk, e.g. for
the purposes of multimedia. Because the price is expensive enough, then this
interface is rarely used for personal purposes.
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