


















He's booted to the System Rescue CD: http://www.sysresccd.org/. This is a great little bootable distro for testing and diagnosis, but not general use.aboveliquidice wrote:looks like you are running linux - which one???
I don't need much in the way of performance, so I was thinking of using some somewhat cheaper CompactFlash cards. I'm going to be running a low-frills Linux install more or less entirely from RAM, and I'm not doing much other than surfing the web and writing papers. I don't need much space, either, really.aboveliquidice wrote:Current prices:
- 8gb Lexar 300x CF = 159.66 X2 = 319.32
- Addonics dual CF to IDE adapter = 22.99
Total for upgrade (near 7200 HD) = 342.31 (not including shipping)
That is a lot of bank - but it sure is cool.
Enter the URL of the non-existing page. Then you can edit it.seneca wrote:This thread contains alot of good info about Compact flash/SSD's and adapters.
If anyone haven't already started, I think I'll begin compiling it all into an article under "X40" in the thinkwiki.
EDIT: And on a side note...How do I make new pages in that wiki?
It was covered on page two:poweragemk wrote:Anyone tried this with one of these? I didn't see it mentioned, apologies if I missed it.
Transcend TS8GIFD18
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820208063
Random write is bound to be bad just like other Transcend products. If you are happy with mwDMA2 and only a single drive in X40 you can try TS8GIFD18. I would not.DVormann wrote:That drive does not exceed mwDMA2 (16.6 MB/s). After reading that I decided not to buy one.XIII wrote:Anybody tried this SSD <http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820208063>
Could you please provide feedback? I really want to research more about it before purchasing.
Thanks,

yeah, I tried that drive as well. It was painfully slow. NOw, I do not know what running in PIO mode means, but when I replace the original HDD with that, it takes over 5 minutes to start up. However, once windows boot, the time it takes to open applications is significantly faster than before. Battery life is the same, but there is no noise. Overall, not worth the money and I returned itDVormann wrote:It was covered on page two:poweragemk wrote:Anyone tried this with one of these? I didn't see it mentioned, apologies if I missed it.
Transcend TS8GIFD18
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820208063
Random write is bound to be bad just like other Transcend products. If you are happy with mwDMA2 and only a single drive in X40 you can try TS8GIFD18. I would not.DVormann wrote:That drive does not exceed mwDMA2 (16.6 MB/s). After reading that I decided not to buy one.
With X41 another detail needs to be considered: Most SATA-PATA bridges support UDMA and PIO but not mwDMA. I do not know which bridge is built into X41. So I do not know if X41 supports mwDMA at all. If not the disk has to run in PIO mode.
Asked Delkin technical support four weeks ago if the card identifies as 'removeable drive' or 'fixed disk' in true IDE mode. Did not receive an answer.mazzinia wrote:http://www.dcviews.com/press/Delkin-16GB.htm
New toy... supporting UDMA natively, and 20 years of warranty
That is interesting. In your current setup, does Windows declare the system drive removeable or fixed?xosh wrote:I was worried about the "removable/fixed" problem - Even though it was shown as a "removable" device, after formatting the disk NTFS, I was able to boot from the CF card.)
You could turn off the "write last acsess time" NTFS-feature as well. Disabling "most recently used" writes is a good idea, too. I am not saying either of that is your problem.xosh wrote:And turned off the page file (or virtual memory) option, indexing service.
I'm happy that you're as far as you got! How did you do the clean Windows XP Tablet install? I am about to start with an install. I have the X41 Tablet Rescue and Recovery disks, but I don't have a working hard drive to pull any files off of. My drive died for the second time and being fed up with the spinning platters, I'm opting for the CF route.xosh wrote:Hi, I am testing Delkin 16GB UDMA CF with Addonics CF-to-IDE converter on my Thinkpad X41 Tablet.
Fortunately, I was able to install Windows XP Tablet 2005 without any problem.(I just formatted the disk NTFS, and installed Windows XP. I was worried about the "removable/fixed" problem - Even though it was shown as a "removable" device, after formatting the disk NTFS, I was able to boot from the CF card.)
The problem I'm having is after the booting, the HDD Read/Write light doesn't go off. I don't know what process is continuously writing (or reading) the disk, but it doesn't stop!(I waited for more than 20 mins...) and obviously, because of the HDD is continously being accessed, the system performance is terrible!
[I'm not saying Delkin CF is really slow. I'm just saying something is wrong and keep trying to access the HDD.]
I installed Windows XP Tablet edition (Clean install). And turned off the page file (or virtual memory) option, indexing service. I have 1.5GB RAM.
After killing a svchost.exe process (and its child processes), it stopped accessing the HDD. But, it started again as I started the Windows Update process (since I just did the clean install). [After killing the process, the performance was increadible... but I cannot say it for sure since no programs nor drivers has been set.]
Do you have any ideas what the process is and suggestions on how I should fix it? (Otherwise, I'll just have to try another clean install - which by the way takes few hours - to see what happens with the default option.)
PS. I believe someone questioned what will happen if he/she uses two CF cards to Addonics CF-to-IDE converter on X41 (and X41 Tablet) model. And someone answered it'll only detect the primary CF card.- Yes, it is true. I tried it, and the secondary CF card is NOT detected.
First of all, thank you for you comments. After some investigations, I realized that the problem was in "wuauclt.exe" which is a part of Windows Update. Since I had a clean install (Windows XP Tablet SP2), I had to update the windows. So, I only installed the ethernet / wireless driver and then performed a windows update.qviri wrote:If you could follow the information and procedure in this Microsoft KB article and post the results of Tasklist /SVC and Tasklist /FI that involve the instances of svchost it may be easier to tell what's causing the disk accesses.
I ran "diskpart" to check it.DVormann wrote: In your current setup, does Windows declare the system drive removeable or fixed?
Write cache for the drive is switched on?
Are you seeing network activity while the hard drive is busy, or alternatively, does the problem not occur when you're not connected to a network? I think one of the settings for automatic updates are to download the updates in the background and then notify the user when they are done. I cannot remember if this is the default setting, though. On a clean install you'd have a lot of updates to download (and store on the hard drive). I don't know if this is the cause, but I can see it being one.xosh wrote:I was able to stop the hard read/writing problem by turning off the "Automatic Update" from the service. However, because of that now I cannot get the windows updated. I don't know why these Microsoft update causes so much pain .Since I didn't any updates other than the first few, I'm thinking about manual update. I'll update it if I found a better way....
That's normal for USB devices. It has nothing to do with the CF card.xosh wrote:Initially, I put the disk to a USB 2.5" HDD case with FAT32 format. At that time, the system recognized it as "removable device".
So the Delkin cards are fixed disk. Good to know.xosh wrote:However, after formatting the disk NTFS, (and installing it as the primary IDE disk of my X41t,) it is now recognized as "partition" - think it means "fixed device".
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 5 guests