Corsair Nova Series SSD

anyone have one?

Friday, August 13, 2010 by MadDeez | Discussion: Personal Computing

I'm seriously considering buying one of these. Anyone out there have one? If yes, what are your impressions and are you happy with it?

First Previous Page 1 of 3 Next Last
Jafo
Reply #1 Friday, August 13, 2010 8:36 PM

I have a 60gig OCZ Summit for my OS.....[it's about as small as you can get away with if you have 12gig of ram]....and I'll never go back to a spinning platter thing for an OS drive....

LightStar
Reply #2 Friday, August 13, 2010 8:51 PM

and I'll never go back to a spinning platter thing for an OS drive

Yeah, but when you need to run three separate OS's like me... what a cost!  Love to have an SSD though, maybe someday.

MadDeez
Reply #3 Friday, August 13, 2010 9:04 PM

that's good to know, jafo. i knew you were happy with your ocz. i may get the 128 gb version. .... not sure yet.

tom, they're getting cheaper all the time. tigerdirect has the 64 gb nova on sale today for 152 bucks. they're usually 199.

narbytrout
Reply #4 Friday, August 13, 2010 9:09 PM

Jafo is right. Once you go SSD for your OS, you'll NEVER go back.

They are so fast and responsive.

OCZ Agility 128Gb here.

alborrelli
Reply #5 Monday, September 6, 2010 10:02 AM

How difficult are they to install and make them your OS drive?  

Is it a matter of simply installing it and installing windows on it and making it the first drive to boot?

RedneckDude
Reply #6 Monday, September 6, 2010 11:51 AM

Everyone is saying "for your OS" and I understand that at the price you wouldn't need it for storage. My questions are, where do you install your apps? On another drive? If so, how does this affect the speed? Is an OS on an SSD really that much faster?

narbytrout
Reply #7 Monday, September 6, 2010 1:52 PM

I have had one now for more than a year and...

Well part of it is the fact that SSD's do not fragment. (no defragging necessary)

I have a 128Gb SSD.  My boot times are more than twice as fast.

I put my Windows7 Home Premium OS and my programs on the SSD.

All of my pics, photos, game saves, movies, and any other "saved" files on my 2Tb hard drive.

The programs seem to start up and respond instantaneously.

(ie. Photoshop starts up super fast... then getting the artwork off of the 2Tb hard drive takes a second or two, but then working with the artwork blazes)

 

alborrelli
How difficult are they to install and make them your OS drive?  

Is it a matter of simply installing it and installing windows on it and making it the first drive to boot?

It is as easy as any HD.

No, it does not have to be the first drive to boot, meaning you could have... let's say... your CDrom boot first if you wish.  What you do need to do is make the SSD with your OS of choice your "primary".

RedneckDude
Everyone is saying "for your OS" and I understand that at the price you wouldn't need it for storage. My questions are, where do you install your apps? On another drive? If so, how does this affect the speed? Is an OS on an SSD really that much faster?

I wouldn't know but, when I decided to go SSD, I thought of the same question.  When I tried to find an answer... I figured instead of the least expensive small SSD just for an OS, why not speed up virtually everything.  I ended up spending a few more dollars, but whoa man... the speed is craaaazy. no regrets.

Now when ever I am on a computer without a SSD, it just doesn't even compare.  I'll never go back.

marlowwe
Reply #8 Monday, September 6, 2010 2:00 PM

I have an Intel X-25M 80GB SSD I've been using since December and I love it. All my apps and important games are on it and the speed difference is huge when compared with a mechanical drive.

RedneckDude
Reply #9 Monday, September 6, 2010 9:23 PM

But it means a reinstall.  Bummer

 

yrag
Reply #10 Monday, September 6, 2010 10:28 PM

But it means a reinstall. Bummer

No Corncob, it doesn't.

Image the old drive, align the SSD and blow the image on it. 

RedneckDude
Reply #11 Monday, September 6, 2010 10:35 PM


But it means a reinstall. Bummer


No Corncob, it doesn't.

Image the old drive, align the SSD and blow the image on it. 

OK, brains, what if my drive is bigger than the SSD that I can afford?

My OS and installed apps.

yrag
Reply #12 Monday, September 6, 2010 10:57 PM

Imaging apps don't image 'free space', just data. Use the "Add new Disk" option.

pacov
Reply #13 Monday, September 6, 2010 11:33 PM

I was in a bit of a spot recently deciding whether or not to jump to a SSD drive or not, but I found a killer deal for 2 10,000 rpm 300 gig velociraptors at $100 a pop.  Figured I'd put that into raid 0 and give it a go.  No real complaints at this point as I think the speed and throughput are pretty close and I get additional strorage per $ (prob better in some stats, worse in others).  But, I still kinda wish I'd have tried out the SSD tech... not because its going to be that much better, but I tend to enjoy trying the latest and greatest.  Anyway, I think my setup is comparable.  Seems like it will be obsolete in the next 2-3 years though. 

Oh and as far as basic setup - I've always gone with a primary hard drive for os + installed apps, a secondary drive for storage (pics, docs, whatever), and a backup device to handle imaging.  I do the same with my current setup and would do the same with a SSD. 

tetleytea
Reply #14 Monday, September 6, 2010 11:44 PM

I'm seeing 256Gig SSD's coming out soon for just over $400.

That's what's keeping me out of flash--the capacity's just going up so quickly, the prices come down so quickly.  

RedneckDude
Reply #15 Monday, September 6, 2010 11:52 PM

Imaging apps don't image 'free space', just data. Use the "Add new Disk" option.

OK, so I need at least a 120GB SSD. For my 7 install only. Not to mention the Vista install.  I am not certain what that would cost, gonna go check, but it's probably out of my range.

I've been cloning drives, hadn't ever used the imaging option. Thanks.

JcRabbit
Reply #16 Tuesday, September 7, 2010 12:47 AM

Guys, if you really want SPEED, what you want to do is get 3 low capacity SSDs (e.g.; Intel 80 GB) and RAID 0 them. Capacity triples (so 3 x 80GB SSDs in RAID 0 is the same as running a single 240 GB SSD) but so does SPEED, as SSDs in RAID 0, unlike hard disks, scale in a linear fashion. This is what I did, and take a look at this:

Running more than 3 SSDs in RAID 0 just for speed is not worth it as three are already saturating the ICH10R bus. SSDs, having no mechanical parts, also have the advantage of being a lot more reliable and robust than hard disks in RAID 0. This said, backups are a must, but only because they are anyway.

RedneckDude
Reply #17 Tuesday, September 7, 2010 12:56 AM

JcRabbit
Guys, if you really want SPEED, what you want to do is get 3 low capacity SSDs (e.g.; Intel 80 GB) and RAID 0 them. Capacity triples (so 3 x 80GB SSDs in RAID 0 is the same as running a single 240 GB SSD) but so does SPEED, as SSDs in RAID 0, unlike hard disks, scale in a linear fashion. This is what I did, and take a look at this:



Reduced 72%

Original 817 x 606



Reduced 69%

Original 493 x 632

Running more than 3 SSDs in RAID 0 just for speed is not worth it as three are already saturating the ICH10R bus. SSDs, having no mechanical parts, also have the advantage of being a lot more reliable and robust than hard disks in RAID 0. This said, backups are a must, but only because they are anyway.

 

Where do I get my degree, so I can understand all that?    

narbytrout
Reply #18 Tuesday, September 7, 2010 12:57 AM

Jim, I have Windows 7 and many other programs like Photoshop CS5, Object Dock, and games like Mass Effect 2 on my 128 Gb SSD.

Here's a basic WinDirStat image of my SSD.

narbytrout
Reply #19 Tuesday, September 7, 2010 1:01 AM

That's cool JcRabbit.

Yeah, I love my SSD, but dude... 3 of 'em in raid 0?  Sounds like fun.  But that's more than I need.

JcRabbit
Reply #20 Tuesday, September 7, 2010 1:05 AM

RedneckDude
Where do I get my degree, so I can understand all that? 

lol! Sorry, it sounds a lot more complicated than it really is. Once installed, the RAID 0 array of SSD drives behaves as transparently as a single SSD drive, only 3 times faster!

Trust me, you ain't lived until you've seen Photoshop open for the first time in 5 seconds flat!

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