Recently Purav and I had the opportunity to work with some retail "SATA II" drives as part of some upcoming articles. Even though we have known about SATA II for well over a year now, seeing retail drives has been really refreshing as Western Digital, Samsung and Hitachi all have units available [RTPE: "SATA II"]. However, the real surprise to us came when the majority of SATA II drives available right now are not capable of 3.0Gbps transfer speeds and others don't claim support for features we almost take for granted; like NCQ. The original SATA standard - usually referred to as SATA, U150, SATA150, or SATA I - gave us a peak transfer rate from the HDD interface to the system bus of about 1.5Gbps. Many believe that if SATA I drives have transfer rates of 1.5Gbps, then 3.0Gbps rates must be held by drives which have SATA II in their names. This is definitely not the case according to the SATA organization:

    "The first step toward a better understanding of SATA is to know that SATA II is not the brand name for SATA's 3Gb/s data transfer rate, but the name of the organization formed to author the SATA specifications. The group has since changed names, to the Serial ATA International Organization, or SATA-IO." - SATA-IO, http://www.sata-io.org

The three main misconceptions are that:

  • "SATA II" has now been renamed to SATA-IO
  • SATA-IO must support 3Gbps transfers
  • SATA-IO must support features like NCQ and Hot Plug

The SATA-IO, or SATA International Organization, specifies that the SATA standard has the potential to top 6Gbps transfer rates; four times what the majority of drives currently offer. While it is probably questionable if 3Gbps transfer rates are even obtainable outside all but the most intensive SATA RAID scenarios, the fact remains that "SATA II" - the name - has absolutely nothing to do with data rates. Also recall that even though a SATA device might claim 3Gbps transfer rates, 20% of the bandwidth is dedicated for parity in the encoding scheme of the bus - which is why we claim effective thoroughput of 300MBps as opposed to 375MBps.

SATA-IO claims we should identify SATA products in much the same manner we identify CPUs; by distinguishing the speed and feature set in the product description. From the SATA-IO website again:

Just because the SATA-IO committee identifies capabilities like NCQ and Hot Plug, they are not required by any standard; however, any device identified as "SATA II" or "SATA-IO" (also mentioned as "SATA Gen 2" in some documents) are backward compatible with SATA I technologies. Frame Information Structure (FIS) based switching supposedly enables smaller RAID stripes to obtain near 2Gbps transfer rates, something not yet capable on existing U150 SATA devices. Getting the word out to IT managers and administrators that "SATA II" devices are not always what they seem now becomes a large challenge for the SATA organization.

Since there is a clear possibility that manufacturers might offer non-NCQ "SATA II" hard drives - let this be a word of warning. Hopefully the market will load up all of the capabilities of SATA whenever a new device comes out, but we get the distinct feeling that purchasing a new hard drive or RAID controller will become a more researched purchase than it has in the past.

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  • bigboxes - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    So, basically SATA II will just be used as a marketing term providing little in terms of new and better standards. The HDD makers will just use it cuz they are able to.

    Disappointing.
  • ryanv12 - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    meh, my 4 year old IDE WD 120 GB hard drive is still chuggin on :)
  • flatblastard - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    I wonder if people just started saying "SATA II" much like we say "Xbox 2" or Playstation 3", to describe the next product for which we don't yet have a name for. I guess it caught on and caused a little confusion.
  • Live - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    Very informative. Chosing a harddrive is getting very complex. Time for a big old roundup maybe?
  • AnnihilatorX - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    lol that's just plan silly.
    The Serial ATA International Organization specifies a "specification" (SATA-IO) which is itself NOT a specification?

    This ain't funny
  • KristopherKubicki - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    ViRGE: The difference between SATA 1.0a and stripped down SATA II seems to be the royalties go to SATA-IO.

    Kristopher
  • ViRGE - Monday, June 20, 2005 - link

    I have to admit this didn't really make anything clearer. If SATA II doesn't require NCQ, 3Gb/sec speeds, or hot swapping, what would a SATA II drive that just meets the base requirements have over a SATA I drive(i.e. what's the difference between SATA I and II)?

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