Abit Hot Rod 66 ATA-66 controller review Charlotte NC

Review of the Abit Hot Rod 66 ATA/66 controller card

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Originally published at Internet.com


ATA-66 has been around a while in the hard drive arena. Western Digital has been selling ATA-66 enabled hard drives since sometime around October 98.

However, other than the MVP4 and Apollo Pro chipsets, controllers and motherboards supporting the spec have been few and far between.

Abit Hot Rod ATA-66

Now, in July of 99, Abit is changing all of that by introducing several products that all support ATA-66, the first of which is the Hot Rod 66.

The Hot Rod 66 is a PCI controller that adds 2 more IDE channels, and both support ATA-66. It gives the user the freedom of supporting up to 4 ATA-66 or lower devices, while allowing the motherboard's onboard IDE ports to be manipulated seperately.

This allows there to be up to 4 IDE channels enabled, 2 ATA-66 channels, and 2 onboard channels on the motherboard, totally up to 8 IDE devices. There goes the lack of IDE channels. :) ---------------------------------------------------------------------

Features

Chipset and Specs * HPT366 UltraDMA-66 contoller * 2 independent ATA channels * 256 Byte FIFO buffer per channel * Concurrent PIO and bus master access Drive Modes Support Ultra ATA 4/3/2/1 PIO 4/3/2/1/0 DMA 2/1/0 BIOS support * Auto Identifies and configures drive type * Auto detects and supports Ultra Mode(ATA/EIDE) transfers * Recognizes drives up to 128 GB (!!) Advanced Data Features * Support new CRC enhanced data protection for Ultra-ATA drivers * Dual data channels allow seperate device timings for Ultar-ATA and EIDE devices Software Support DOS 5.0 and above Windows 95/98 Windows NT 4.0 Summary ---------------------------------------------------------------------

Price Street $50 + ATA-66 capable Adds 2 IDE channels - Pricey Drives are just beginning to use the extra bandwidth

Overall The jury is still out on thee performance increase of ATA/66 with today's hard drives, but the HotRod66 is great for adding on 4 more IDE ports. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Setup as tested: Celeron 300A @ 450 Mhz 128MB Viking PC100 SDRAM Diamond Viper V550 AGP 9GB Seagate Medalist Pro 7200rpm ATA-33 13GB WD AC31300 ATA-66 Digital Research 50x CD Creative SB Live! Value 19" Viewsonic PS790 Windows 98

So what came with it?

The card was packaged with a good manual, a driver disk, and two ATA-66 dual-drive cables. The manual was pretty good, covering installation thoroughly on Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows NT 4.0. The cables are 80-conductor, 40-pin cables as required by the ATA-66 spec. Below is a diagram of the cables (courtesy Abit).

40 Conductor Cable vs. 80 Conductor Cable

Installation

Installation proceeded well, except for a few snags. As the manual points out, the blue connector must be plugged into the motherboard, the black one connects to the master drive and the grey connects to the slave. The cable itself reminded me somewhat of an Ultra-Wide SCSI cable with colored IDE connectors.

The installation of the card went fine, and after disabling the primary channel on the motherboard (to save IRQs since it was no longer in use), I booted to Windows. The card was detected properly and the drivers installed. After a successful reboot, I downloaded the enabling software from the Western Digital web site. Then, I rebooted to a floppy to enable ATA-66 on my Western Digital 13GB drive which had been running in ATA-33 mode to this point. Upon booting and running the software, I found that the software did not detect any hard drives installed, even though I had two connected to the Hot Rod 66. I found that I had to reinstall the drive to the original motherboard IDE connector, then re-run the ATA-66 enabling program again. Once I did this, I was able to detect the hard drive and convert it to ATA-66 mode.

From there, I simply rebooted and the drive was detected at ATA-66 and everything worked perfectly.

Performance

First, the test. The 13GB Western Digital drive was set to be a slave to my 9GB Seagate Medalist Pro drive. Both drives had DMA checked for the first test (for the second, the drive properties didn't have the checkbox). It was then partitioned as follows: 1.8 GB FAT32 | 2GB FAT | 6.6GB FAT32 | 1.7GB FAT32

The first partition had 600 MB free space and the third partition had 1GB free space. These are the two partitions where WinBench was tested and Threadmark was run with both of those partitions checked. After every test, the hard drive was defragged and the PC was rebooted. On to the benchmarks...

winbench99biz.jpg (30792 bytes)

winbench99he.jpg (29563 bytes)

For the most part, there is improvement in the scores from ATA-33 to ATA-66, but the improvement varies, seemingly randomly. Perhaps there is some order, but it is difficult to discern, especially with the differences in the 3rd Partition. The Threadmark benchmark is a bit more telling.

Author: Joel Kleppinger

Read article at Internet.com site

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