Saturday, 30 June 2012

StarTech.com USB 3.0 to SATA IDE HDD Docking Station Review

by Ganesh T S on 6/18/2012 1:30:00 PM
Posted in Gadgets , SATA , USB 3.0

StarTech.com specializes in gadgets performing niche, yet handy functions. We reviewed their portable SATA duplicator last year, and this time around we have another interesting gadget from their stables. SATA and IDE hard drive docks / enclosures are a dime a dozen. However, the combination of features provided by the StarTech.com USB 3.0 SATA/IDE HDD docking station persuaded us to get a unit in-house for evaluation.

The unit supports upright docking of up to two disks (one SATA and one IDE). Both 2.5" and 3.5" drives can be used. Simultaneous access to both slots is also allowed. USB 3.0 (backward compatible with USB 2.0) is the only mode of communication between the PC and the dock.

Apart from the main unit pictured above, the package comes with the following components:

36W switching adapter with US power cord1 x 3ft. USB 3.0 A Male to B Male cable1 x IDE 40 to 40-Pin Cable (for 3.5" IDE drives)1 x LP4 Power Cable (for 3.5" IDE drives)1 x 40-Pin + LP4 to 44-Pin IDE Cable (for 2.5" IDE drives)Instruction Manual

For the purpose of testing out the unit, we used the following drives:

Western Digital Caviar WD400 40GB IDE HD WD400BB-00DEA0Samsung HD103SJ 1000 GB 7200rpm SATA HDCorsair Performance 3 Series SATA III SSD CSSD-P3128GB2

While the WD and Corsair units were used for testing performance, the Samsung unit was used to check up on the power consumption profile of the unit under typical operating conditions. The Corsair SSD was also securely erased prior to the benchmarking in order to restore it to the optimum performance level. The IDE drive wasn't recognized with the jumper settings in Slave mode. Removing the jumper completely enabled access to the drive.

On the host side, we used our Ivy Bridge HTPC setup based on the Asus P8H77-M Pro motherboard. The H77 chipset provides native USB 3.0 and this rules out any performance limitation on the testbed side. The full specifications are provided below.

StarTech.com USB 3.0 to SATA IDE Docking Station Testbed SetupProcessorIntel Core i7-3770K - 3.50 GHz (Turbo to 3.9 GHz)Intel HD Graphics 4000 - 650 MHz (Max. Dynamic Frequency of 1150 MHz)MotherboardAsus P8H77-M Pro uATXOS DriveSeagate Barracuda XT 2 TBSecondary DrivesKingston SSDNow V+ 128 GB SATA II SSD SNV325-S2/128GBCorsair Performance 3 Series SATA III SSD CSSD-P3128GB2MemoryG.SKILL ECO Series 4GB (2 x 2GB) SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10666) F3-10666CL7D-4GBECO CAS 9-9-9-24CaseAntec VERIS Fusion Remote MaxPower SupplyAntec TruePower New TP-550 550WOperating SystemWindows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1DisplayAcer H243H.

Note that the Asus P8H77-M Pro motherboard has USB 3.0 Boost, which can be used to improve the performance of storage devices connected to its USB 3.0 ports. In the Turbo mode, the BOT (Bulk Only Transport) protocol is used to improve performance (and is supported by all USB devices). USB 3.0 boost can also operate in UASP (USB Attached SCSCI Protocol) mode if the controller on the device side supports it. UASP allows multiple commands to be in transit between the host and the device at any given point of time.

For the purpose of our testing, we operated in default mode (without Turbo or UASP). This should give us an idea of the minimum performance level which can be obtained from the unit. However, we will also see whether Turbo or UASP mode makes any difference to the benchmark numbers.

Inside the Docking Station Introduction and Testbed Setup Inside the Docking Station SATA and IDE Performance Benchmarks Miscellaneous Aspects and Final Words Print This Article 17 Comments View All Comments Post a Comment I've got the 4 HDD versions by alacard on Monday, June 18, 2012 And they work well, highly recommended. (just make sure when you open the box you got a new one (no scratches), the older models have major flaws, and startech will rebox returns and send them out as new). alacard Reply Will have to look it up. by Paul Tarnowski on Monday, June 18, 2012 I'll have to look it up. I've had USB 3.0 for almost a year and I still haven't a single device for it. This one might just give me the excuse to get one.

BTW, I've never heard of SCSCI. But I'm guessing from usage that it's a Type-0 Protocol, right? Paul Tarnowski Reply Using the single HDD version with fan, USB 3.0, eSATA by Chuck_NC on Monday, June 18, 2012 The single HDD version with built-in fan that I have has worked very well. It is finicky when used with a USB3.0 hub (random disconnects, noticed on large file copies), and won't pass Smart data to older SATA and eSATA ports. The adjustable fan is loud, but when dialed up to full speed, even keeps the fastest spinning drives cool (tested up to 10K drives). I have tried other units, especially some that use port multiplier technology with severely poor results. Have been very happy with this one on both USB3.0 and eSATA. The eSATA port seems to be faster on most machines that I have. Chuck_NC Reply Does it spin down the hard drive after inactivity? by Rix2357 on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 Lots of these USB 3.0 to hard drive adaptors don't spin down the hard drives after inactivity. I care a lot about this because I keep mine attached to the notebook as an almost permanent storage and if they don't spin down, the hard drives get pretty hot after awhile. Rix2357 Reply RE: Does it spin down the hard drive after inactivity? by ganeshts on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 Yes, it does! I have mentioned that in the review also. ganeshts Reply Vertical drives by AstroGuardian on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 Doesn't it have a detrimental effect on the drive life that it's positioned vertically?
Especially for older IDE drives which were probably placed horizontally for most of their life time. AstroGuardian Reply RE: Vertical drives by sheh on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 I've always been uneasy about that too. Also some of these decks keep the drives in an angle, I think. I wonder not only about used drives but also new.

I recall reading something about drives being designed to run when positioned straight in any orientation, but it still makes me wonder. sheh Reply RE: Vertical drives by AssBall on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 I really doubt it will make a difference. I have run drives hanging upside down off a power cable for 4 years without any issues. Run several of them sideways as well, and never could tell any difference in lifespan. AssBall Reply RE: RE: Vertical drives by Lerianis on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 That is an old-wives tale. Modern hard drives (last 10 years) are meant to be able to run fine when mounted in any way. Stood up, on it's side, sitting on it's top, etc.

As long as the drive doesn't vibrate and move, the drive should be fine. SSD's, of course, with no moving parts, you don't even have to worry about the drive moving. Lerianis Reply RE: Vertical drives by Taft12 on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 Got a source for that claim? I've not heard it before and many smaller cases have hard drives mounted vertically. Taft12 Reply Subject Comment Post Comment Please login or register to post a comment.
User Name Password Remember me? Login 1 2 Next » View All Comments Post a Comment Follow AnandTech
Latest from AnandTech Pipeline Submit News! Samsung's Galaxy S 3 US Marketing Focuses On Features New Windows Start Screen Demoed on Lumia 900 running Windows Phone 7.8 Microsoft Announces First Windows Phone 8 Hardware Partners, Qualcomm SoCs Inside [Update: MSM8960] Existing Windows Phone 7 devices will get updated to Windows Phone 7.8, not Windows 8 Windows Phone 8 Adds support for Multi Core SoCs, Higher Resolutions, microSD, and NFC Microsoft's Windows Phone Summit in San Francisco - We're There Acer’s Timeline Ultra M5: Ivy Bridge Ultrabooks with Kepler GPUs Hynix to Acquire Link A Media Devices (LAMD) Microsoft Surface - We Go Hands On [UPDATE: Detailed Impressions] iBuyPower's Valkyrie CZ-17 Rides In Nokia Announces PureView 808 Coming to USA for $699 Microsoft's Major Announcement in LA - We're There! DailyTech Lian Li Shows Off New EATX PC Case with Front-Mounted PSU Samsung Expects to Sell 10 Million Galaxy S III Smartphones in July Sony, Panasonic to Collaborate on Next Gen OLED Panels for TVs and Large Displays Report: RIM's Bank Advisers Suggest Sale of BlackBerry Handset Business Website "Funny Junk" Steals The Oatmeal's Work, Sues Charities MIT Builds All-Carbon Buckyball and Nanotube Solar Cell Louisiana Sex Offenders Must Make Their Crimes Visible on Social Networks 6/22/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews -- "Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition" Edition United States Accused of Using Flame to try to Cripple Iran's Economy Microsoft Surface Tablet to be Wi-Fi Only at Launch AMD's Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition Earns "Tie" With GTX 680 Nintendo to Release Larger 3DS XL in Japan Next Month, U.S. in August for $199 Yesterday's Global Twitter Outage Caused by "Cascading Bug" SSDs Become More Attractive as Cost per Gigabyte Continues to Decrease Sony Announces Plan to Increase Production Capacity for Stacked CMOS Image Sensors TWC Prevents DVR Commercial Skipping with New Patent Quick Note: Ford Respond to JD Power MyFord Touch Criticism... Sort of Twitter Logging off :) @PenLlawen I started AT in 1997 when I was 14 :-P @scottwasson congrats man! 10 minute nap/sleep then off to the airport, but at least I don't need to carry any laptops/tablets with me this time. @Bindibadgi you know me too well :-P @Bindibadgi everything but the phone, have no plans of using it except to get around though :) I turn 30 on Tuesday, flying someplace relaxing for a couple of days. First vacation in nearly a decade. 2012 MBA and more when I get back. @tldtoday thank you :) One more review done, will post Monday morning (it's a short one, I promise) :) @mpanzarino thank you very much :)  

Copyright © 1997-2012 AnandTech, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms, Conditions and Privacy Information.
Click Here for Advertising Information Quantcast

No comments:

Post a Comment