Run Windows 98 on SD Card vs HDD and SSD

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  • čas přidán 1. 09. 2022
  • SD cards have improved with their performance I bought newer faster models and we are testing how they perform with Windows 98 instead of using traditional Hard Drives or Solid State Drives. Make sure you use SD cards with A1 or A2 rating as they have better write performance.
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Komentáře • 459

  • @linuxgeex
    @linuxgeex Před rokem +98

    SD cards still have a Flash Translation Layer for wear levelling. No worries there. They're slow because they don't have enough RAM to hold the FTL in the controller, so it has to go to the flash to figure out where blocks are stored on the flash, and when writing it can only handle one thread, so unlike an SSD write performance does not scale up with multiple threads.

    • @IsmaelWensder
      @IsmaelWensder Před rokem +1

      Once i was installing WinToUSB Windows 7 and my microsd stopped working, now it get hot if i try to use it, only show a smaller partition, can't do anything. Is it dead by too many writes on the flash memory?

    • @darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893
      @darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893 Před rokem

      What if you do 4KB with exfat?

    • @darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893
      @darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893 Před rokem

      I wonder what my SD cards was born with out of the box... Sadly to late to check.

    • @linuxgeex
      @linuxgeex Před rokem +3

      @@darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893 The A1/A2 rated SD/TF cards do work well with EXFAT and 4k block sizes, but anything else you'd be better off with FAT32 and either 64k or 128k block sizes. Also consider disaster recovery. There's great free recovery tools for FAT32.
      The actual flash eraseblock size (minimum actual working set size of the physical flash media) is usually 128k or larger, and the more you slice it up, the more times you rewrite all the shared blocks, and they get distributed out to other eraseblocks in the process, which then slows your IO down by that factor. Larger sizes will be faster, but they waste space. Not a big deal if you're saving large files like 24MP photos and videos
      There's also dedicated flash filesystems, which are aware of flash's limitations. Examples are Microsoft's FFS2, Linux's JFFS2, and Samsung's F2FS. The problem with using these is that they're poorly supported across a wide variety of systems / devices. If you don't need to access your files on other systems or devices, you're less concerned with disaster recovery, then these may be worthwhile for you.

    • @AgtP
      @AgtP Před rokem +1

      Windows 98 should fit entirely in a Ram drive nowadays. Heck even windows 7 fits in today's ram.

  • @Kelphelp
    @Kelphelp Před rokem +13

    Absolutely amazing benchmarks man, and has really helped solidify what I would want to do with hard drive solutions for 98. Thanks so much, your videos have been an invaluable resource for re-learning these OS!

  • @LeeMc007
    @LeeMc007 Před rokem +19

    Loved the way you tested those Phil with the Win98 install, great idea, I think the feeling we get that SD Cards are so much faster is just access time especially with older builds, I've used almost every different type of storage for Win 98 machines and I really find it hard not to keep going back to decent 40-120gb IDE HDD's but I've been fairly lucky with reliability. 🤞🤞

  • @C4103
    @C4103 Před rokem +26

    My Win98 machine uses an SD card as its main drive. I've never had any issues with it, and the performance is really not that bad, it's not like the machine is super fast in the first place. I've never had an issue with stuttering during disk access or anything like that. For me the biggest convenience of an SD card is that I can do the Win98 install using VMWare on my modern PC directly to the SD card, then pop it into the adapter on the retro PC to finish setup. Since SD cards are cheap, I can also keep a booklet of pre-configured OS setups ready to swap out whenever I want. Backup is also very easy, just take the SD card out and put it in a modern PC and image the card all without having to open the PC.

    • @jadhal6649
      @jadhal6649 Před rokem

      I want windows 98 se , running in pen drive.
      Without hdd .
      Can it possible

    • @C4103
      @C4103 Před rokem +1

      @@jadhal6649 That might be possible, depending on your motherboard's ability to boot from USB. A lot of the pre-UEFI motherboards have issues booting from USB. Those that do support it though will generally have the options "USB FDD" or "USB HDD." In theory you could install the OS to USB in VMWare and then boot from USB HDD on the retro system. Like I said tho, USB booting is very finicky depending on the specific year of motherboard / BIOS version.

  • @syoder1974
    @syoder1974 Před rokem +2

    Crushed that like button before I even watched it. Of course Phil's videos will be well prepared, well-edited, and thorough. Can't get enough of these! And yes, I was planning to do the same thing with a recent adapter and SD card that I picked up!

  • @georgez8859
    @georgez8859 Před rokem +1

    Great Video Phil. I use the SD to IDE adapters in my machines. Thanks for all the work you do for us.

  • @SireSquish
    @SireSquish Před rokem +10

    Win98SE on a PCIe Gen 4 NVME. Now that's putting a fusion reactor on a Model T.

  • @GarthBeagle
    @GarthBeagle Před rokem +15

    Fantastic comparison, thanks for putting this together. Awhile back, I switched my (original one BTW) Win98 system from it's HDD to a IDE-CF setup, for ease of backup, getting files onto the system, and of course to replace the aging HDD.

    • @moomah5929
      @moomah5929 Před rokem

      I'm using CF too and with DMA mode I'm getting >50 MB per second with a 32GB Sandisk Extreme. The only drawback is the higher price vs SD cards. Still need to do something about the pagefile though.

    • @sjogosPT
      @sjogosPT Před rokem

      @@moomah5929that card is working in “fixed drive” mode?

    • @moomah5929
      @moomah5929 Před rokem

      @@sjogosPT I guess it is as it doesn't show up as removable storage.

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber Před rokem +7

    Phil's Computer Lab - Making my Windows 98 PC Great!

  • @611ethan
    @611ethan Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the video Phil. These SD adapters are great for retro PCs. I've used this adapter with 2 sd cards to boot Win 98 and Win XP on a p4 system with ISA slot. I got an SD card slot extender cable for mine so that the card slot sat on my desk for easier swapping of cards. The extender that I had slowed the read/write speeds down a bit though, but I felt it was still useable for games.

  • @tech34756
    @tech34756 Před rokem +8

    I love the adapter in my retro PC, definitely one of the better purchases I made for it.
    I don’t normally use it as a boot drive but instead for data storage, things like installing Windows 98, large file transfers, ghost backups, etc.
    It’s split into 3x2GB partitions for DOS support and the rest for Win98.
    When I do use it for OSs, it’s ones I don’t intend to keep e.g. messing around with OS/2 (the adapter is on the secondary IDE, so I can ‘protect’ the main SSD by just disabling the primary IDE controller in BIOS).

  • @bazzle592
    @bazzle592 Před rokem +10

    SSDs/SD cards may be reliable, but nothing can replace the incessant whirring and clunking of a proper dinosaur drive lol

  • @kunka592
    @kunka592 Před rokem +5

    I have front 2.5" hot-swap bays in my old machines alongside IDE to SATA adapters. It's easy to swap SSDs around between machines including a modern PC (with a SATA to USB adapter) to back up the entire drive or restore an image from backup, or just copy files around in explorer.

  • @davkdavk
    @davkdavk Před rokem +1

    Phiiiil, I have one of those converters coming in the post. perfect timing!.

  • @edsiefker1301
    @edsiefker1301 Před rokem +10

    Since you're bringing up SSDs on a 9x system, which involves SATA to IDE adaptors, I have to strongly, STRONGLY caution against the cheap green adaptors all over eBay. I've had them brick SSDs permanently.
    Use a Startech if you're going to adapt SATA to IDE. Do NOT cheap out here.

    • @UNSCPILOT
      @UNSCPILOT Před rokem +2

      Appreciate the warning, planning to build a XP/linux machine with some "socket A" era parts I had kicking around, figured it'd be fun to pair with the floppy disk loading Sony Mavica FD75 I've started playing with lately
      Figured it'd be nice to have a PC that still has native floppy drive support in the hardware and I already had the old motherboard, CPU, GPU, and a couple other bits, mostly need RAM, storage, and a apropriate case.
      It'll be funny to have it sitting beside my modern VR capable rig I loaded with Garuda Linux, knowing which parts to get to keep it reliable will be fantastic

    • @STONE69_
      @STONE69_ Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the heads up, just about to buy a couple.

    • @STONE69_
      @STONE69_ Před rokem +1

      @@UNSCPILOT I hear Garuda Linux is good with the GPU support as far as Drivers.

  • @cd-lf8xm
    @cd-lf8xm Před rokem +2

    Another use case for SD cards; projects and testing. If you’re doing a temporary build or just want to try out a configuration before committing SD cards are a perfect use case.
    The IDEtoSD can mount on the expansion bracket with a 3d print holder and is very convenient and easy to eject/update.

  • @sburton015
    @sburton015 Před rokem +3

    My oldest laptop the Toshiba Satellite 330cds that I still have and works fine still has it's original 4 gb hard drive with a date of October of 1998. Still works fine with Windows 98 second edition.

    • @alexsmith8021
      @alexsmith8021 Před rokem

      What kind of hdd is it

    • @sburton015
      @sburton015 Před rokem +2

      @@alexsmith8021 the original IDE hard drive that came with the laptop almost 24 years ago. Amazingly I ran scan disk in msdos and it still shows no bad sectors at all. I remember that not many people had smartphones in 1998.

  • @Fahrenheit38
    @Fahrenheit38 Před rokem +8

    This confirms my preference for sata SSDs for win98 machines.

  • @karolwojtyla3047
    @karolwojtyla3047 Před rokem

    Hello Phil, interesting movie as always, Greetings! :)

  • @BastetFurry
    @BastetFurry Před rokem +3

    One of those "why not both" moments. My Retro PC has a SD card that can be accessed from the front as its primary harddisk and some rotating rust as its data graveyard. The magnetic hdd also has the burden of the pagefile so that i can happily run 98 from the SD card all day long.
    Backup is also pretty easy: pull the SD card, put into big brother, Gnome Disk Utility, Create Image, done.

  • @carlolalattacosterbosa5821

    nice test, thank you!

  • @3dfxvoodoocards6
    @3dfxvoodoocards6 Před rokem +18

    Like. Windows 98 hardware and software is very interesting.

  • @retropuffer2986
    @retropuffer2986 Před rokem +3

    Nice idea Phil.

  • @smiththers2
    @smiththers2 Před rokem +1

    I'm so happy that I still have a few of those Seagate drives brand new in the foil...I have found compatibility issues with some ssd based storage and a real ide drive can't be beat for compatibility

  • @shikoist
    @shikoist Před rokem +3

    I used 2 CF on my retro PCs (Windows 98 SE) and they broke down in about half a year of common working and playing. So I switched to more or less live conventional HDD. They work perfectly.

  • @patchouli3422
    @patchouli3422 Před rokem +5

    I wonder how this compares to CF cards

  • @hinac3
    @hinac3 Před rokem +2

    I use hdd and sdcards for Windows 95 / 98 and msdos. I think, sdcards are better for transfer games and programs and make a backup of the disk. However, I was convinced that sd cards made my systems faster.
    Thanks for this complete test, we can see that hdd's still have a future in our old PC's!

  • @Jason-vl9uz
    @Jason-vl9uz Před rokem +16

    Love seeing the comparisons. Makes an overall very compelling case for an SSD, but I still can't give up using a microSD with a 3d printed 5.25 bay adapter off ebay for the ide/sd adapter, because it's so easy to pop the SD in and out to connect it to my main PC, or to swap out different SD's with different windows installations/driver combos.

    • @chiel340
      @chiel340 Před rokem +2

      Do you have an ebay link for these 5.25 brackets? I cant find them...

    • @jessihawkins9116
      @jessihawkins9116 Před rokem

      @@chiel340 yeah

  • @blakedmc1989RaveHD
    @blakedmc1989RaveHD Před rokem +1

    glad to see another vid from ya, but i would be scared for my life to use a SD Memory card for a Windows 98 Retro gaming PC especially if i wanna run intensive Windows 98 Era games

  • @brunorbf
    @brunorbf Před rokem +8

    I use SD and CF on several of my retro machines. However, I tend to mix them with a regular HDD if using Windows 9x because of the "swap/pagefile" so that I don't kill the card.

  • @PaulsComputerEmp
    @PaulsComputerEmp Před rokem +1

    Recently, I tried out an eBay laptop IDE to SD converter on an old Dell Latitude paired with a SanDisk ultra 80MB/s 16GB (SD card tested fine on a modern PC). It surprised me how slow it was, so much slower than the IDE desktop converters and even slower than an actual 4GB laptop hard disk. Windows 98 also had random issues and errors. Thank you for taking the time to make this.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +1

      Yes the Ultra is a very basic model. Try it with a Extreme Pro A1 rated, it should perform much better.

    • @e8root
      @e8root Před rokem +1

      Flash storage without proper SSD disk controllers are hardly usable for Windows systems because Windows does tons of random writes all the time. On flash memory to write even one byte you need to read sector which is like 256KB data, zero whole sector and then write it again. Windows will also write some sectors multiple times leading to bad sectors. I doubt your issues were due to damaged flash and are probably likely due to IDE controller not liking CF controller or the card. With CF cards (which do not need controller because CF uses IDE interface) there was issue with some cards being detected as removable devices.

  • @summerxia9027
    @summerxia9027 Před rokem +2

    Welcome to Phil's day 😁Good job

  • @shaneeslick
    @shaneeslick Před rokem +1

    G'day Phil,
    WOW! Really interesting Comparison, you can basically find an adapter for anything these days & yeah those small capacity SD Cards with Adapter would come in handy for really old OS that have compatability issues with large capacity drives especially now it is basically impossible to find Quality SSDs under 120GB.
    If I was to do IDE Performance Benchmrking I would chose the 2.5" SSD & Adapter Option, my oldest OS is XP so no size issues & I have some 120/128GB SSDs + also still plentiful at shops.

  • @michaelluong6484
    @michaelluong6484 Před rokem +3

    Thanks, Phil!

  • @klocugh12
    @klocugh12 Před rokem +1

    BTW if you miss mechanical noise for SD cards/SSDs, there is a dedicated HDD clicker to work around that. LGR reviewed it a while ago.

  • @MattHalpain
    @MattHalpain Před rokem

    I am in my 40's and I find this video to be very interesting and informative and entertaining. I am a hobby PC builder myself.

  • @allezvenga7617
    @allezvenga7617 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for your sharing

  • @edsiefker1301
    @edsiefker1301 Před rokem +5

    How do you enable DMA mode during Windows installation? I always do that in device manager after installation.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +2

      On this board the VIA chipset drivers do it. But otherwise go into device manager and enable under the hard drive.

    • @edsiefker1301
      @edsiefker1301 Před rokem +1

      @@philscomputerlab How do you do that during installation though? There's no device manager to go into until after Windows is installed, right?

    • @alexsmith8021
      @alexsmith8021 Před rokem

      @@edsiefker1301 right

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      @@edsiefker1301 Ahh yes you're right. Brain malfunctioning... After installing 98 I ran Disk benchmark but didn't end up using the data as the installation times had better spread.

  • @savinienbrulfert1
    @savinienbrulfert1 Před 7 měsíci

    Really nice video. I would like to see if something ''exotic'' is possible and how fast (or slow it is) like windows 98 with memory card type like : memory stick, CFCard, smartmedia, mmc or uhccard, compact flash etc 😊 maybe my commentary is really dumb and all of that are impossible but i think it would be a funny experiment

  • @HZL_AD
    @HZL_AD Před rokem +2

    woww Phil , win98 video again...💪.

  • @christopherjackson2157
    @christopherjackson2157 Před rokem +1

    I like ur install benchmark. Much better than read/write numbers in crystal diskmark or the like.

  • @joey_after_midnight
    @joey_after_midnight Před rokem +2

    I have a slightly different use case but similar. I tried using SD, microSD, CompactFlash, SSD and m.2 drives with SATA and IDE to SATA Adapters about Five years ago to replace the IDE drives in DVD/HDD Recorders. Found the same results as you. But settled on m.2 SATA to IDE combos. The IDE to SATA adapters are varied and unstable. Sometimes 8051/China (SinTech) based ones work, sometimes only Marvell (StarTech). But mostly Marvell they also emulate ODD (Optical Disk Drive) IDE commands which some systems need depending on use case. And Hard or Soft Primary/Secondary support or emulation is needed depending on the system. This was also explored by the Rovi/TiVo Community several years back on their Forums, but they found the same thing.. no (one) IDE to SATA Adapter chip works for all cases.. and m.2 wasn't an option back in those days... I carried m.2 for TiVO research forward and it works. But not all m.2 are equal.. there are NVMe and mSata m.2 devices. NVMe is gaining steam as its faster and more often bootable on new UEFI systems. mSata works with SATA to IDE adapters but is becoming less available. Like CompactFlash/Lexar it may be gone or rare in a few years. Vogons and some other forums have a few people working on ODD replacements.. which work off microSD (or) high speed USB/Flash drives with controllers.. like the Corsairs.. and using ext32 "image" files.. but so far only tattieboogle has a working proof of concept that looks extensible.. its expensive and has an IDE debugger.. for collecting data and extending the IDE command set it supports. Using high speed USB Flash with an IDE adapter looks long term more sustainable.. and its much faster.. but its not quite here yet.. and there aren't really any viable solutions yet. IDE Disk on Chip is an ancient nvram approach but not very scalable. Some ancient CNC Machines still rely on a Russian IDE disk emulation disk on a card, but it doesn't look to be cheap enough or widely available. Software IDE bus emulation is only just becoming possible outside the realm of bespoken glue logic FPGA arrays. Building discrete IDE bus chip circuits isn't very appealing to mass production efforts by low volume producers. The situation is "changing" but very slowly.. there isn't a large market for this stuff and its mostly Retro/Archeologists and Retro/gamers pursuing the options.. and oddballs like me.. into Retro DVD/HDD capture and support. At onetime I thought ATA over Ethernet, might be the way forward, a network card with a ROM extension that a board could use to boot from because it looks like an IDE device, that boots from a Network shared Blob.. bit like iSCSI that technology wasn't generic enough for many scenarios.. it was a bit specific and brittle as a general solution.. and I had to abandon it. AoE cards are much rarer these days.. but perhaps someday they will come back with VDHI and software emulation in silicon.

  • @thesmokingcap
    @thesmokingcap Před rokem

    I'm rocking those cheap Msata to ide adapters in my old toshibas. Quite handy as you can still find smaller SSD's. So far it has been good. I dual boot Windows 95 and Windows 2000. It's a Satellite 4015CDT, the factory drive was really slow and loud (also was dieing)

  • @duncanmacdonald8396
    @duncanmacdonald8396 Před 4 měsíci

    Have had good experiences with the KingWin SATAIDE adapters ($15 on Amazon) lately with my Pentium 120 dos/win98 box, no fuss and no compatibility problems encountered yet.

  • @MidnightGeek99
    @MidnightGeek99 Před rokem +22

    Excellent comparison!
    Bigger HDDs, 160-200 GB IDE ones, are excellent for Win98SE, they have awesome performance, and the compatibility is top notch, at least compared to SSDs and SD cards.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +7

      Yes as long as they still work, for sure! A drive like a 120 GB 7200 RPM Seagate will do very well.

    • @MidnightGeek99
      @MidnightGeek99 Před rokem +6

      @@philscomputerlab oh, and I forgot, this side by side comparison is a great idea, very easy to understand what's going on :)

    • @zarkeh3013
      @zarkeh3013 Před rokem

      @Alexander Ratisbona toss a PCI2SATA1.5 at it and HDD SSD it up?

    • @zarkeh3013
      @zarkeh3013 Před rokem

      @@vardekpetrovic9716 partitions....!

    • @KabelkowyJoe
      @KabelkowyJoe Před rokem +1

      WD Black 2.5" 250GB only 128GB is recognized by most BIOS yet you are right, much faster than any mSata SSD + ATA44 adapter i tested i own. Is just better to simply use most modern HDD possible, and partition. I personally also use Marcium Reflect 6.3 CD-ROM media to backup, restore instead get out of machine every time and swap, duplicate. I have 5 adapters maybe, various brand, to replace drives in TC1100, NC8000, 2710p, 2730p HP laptops and Dell SX260 recognizes 250GB WD Black proven to be faster than SSD when i attempted to install and tested. Old Seagate 160BGB, 110GB almost as fast as mSata. Old 2.5" HDD are fast enough and silent to be installed in desktop machine. What i personally hate and suspect people want to get rid of retro machines are old noisy 3.5" drives so any idea is better than none. But also what you want is to duplicate data. So i woulnd not dare to argue 3.5" are better because it's not true something has to be done.. bigfoot oh mine got i do have one of these.. awful. Backup and restore needs just good software tried to use SD cards before i discovered software exists. Old Paragon Partition Manager 6 can boot of single floppy, have additional HDD pluged into, as donor, much better than swap SD cards of already installed OS on it. Having HDD of some sort, bunch of HDD specially 2.5" afterall seems to be compromise and mSata plus adapters. HDD is great cause you actually can hear some noise, some feedback, some information HDD is bussy while it's impossible to have using SSD. Yet it's fast enough, sometimes even faster than any SSD adapter CPU can be. These SD, CF adapters are not pass trough there is always some translation, even if card is extreme fast we are limited by speed of CPU in these adapters. Only HDD can fill IDE interface speed without any additional limiting factors. If it's slow as CF, SD card and its silent you get frustrated so i always preffer HDD unless it's machine im using daily and want it to be completely silent.IMO after all these years 2.5" and mSata rules! Of all software i tested Marcium Reflect is just must have even on Linux install. Easiest way to maitain multiple PCs and hold data in one place giant HDD or NAS WebDav enabled to access from Windows 98

  • @alextirrellRI
    @alextirrellRI Před rokem

    I've been using a SATA SSD with an IDE adapter in my build. Works great!

  • @istvanstikrad3354
    @istvanstikrad3354 Před rokem +1

    I'm using a Samsung HM160HC 2,5" notebook IDE drive in a SS7 board (mostly for DOS though). A relatively late PATA drive which for some reason can still be bought new. Only needs a cheap 3,5" to 2,5" IDE cable adapter, it's very quiet and relatively fast. It's 160GB therefore may need some workarounds with older boards.

  • @aris5921
    @aris5921 Před rokem +1

    Im using a 4x Compact Flash Raid Adapter Sil0680 to pci for my athlon64 win98se machine, is good that it sees it as a scsi adapter and you get to free the ide channels but is not easy to find fast cf cards which have to be bootable and I don't get a lot of speed, there are some cf to sd adapters but I have not tested them yet (was supposed to be a cheap solution )
    Good work👍

  • @chrisd.5625
    @chrisd.5625 Před rokem

    Great test. Got a 128GB SSD for cheap with a startech adapter and things are just a breeze. W98 feels as snappy as more modern OS (for the most part)

  • @MaskedGEEK
    @MaskedGEEK Před rokem

    This is a great in-depth guide on using SD cards for retro PCs. I've seem many creators go the SD card route but not fully explaining the how or why.
    But there's a part that really niggles me, 07:57 - using a RAM Disk for the pagefile. So, using RAM to have a pagefile should you run out of RAM? Very counter intuitive. If one would need to use a RAM disk for the pagefile, I'd suggest doubling the RAM in the machine and use that extra RAM for the pagefile, also make sure you have far more RAM than you'd likely ever use.

  • @FEETOFKEELEY
    @FEETOFKEELEY Před rokem

    This is amazing! 👍👍

  • @saxxonpike
    @saxxonpike Před rokem +11

    I have tried using SD cards in my builds. They work okay for installation and some casual use, but I had some problems with longevity- inevitably, the data would either become corrupt or very slow. I wonder how much of this has to do with the adapter I was using (since I don't have SATA, I have to adapt to IDE.) Only SLC CF has worked consistently enough to date as far as flash storage goes. Controllers and drivers just don't know how to handle flash storage well.

    • @sherlocksinha2435
      @sherlocksinha2435 Před rokem +1

      Probably because these SD cards don't like random read and write operations all too well

    • @kjrchannel1480
      @kjrchannel1480 Před rokem +1

      I ran into phantom data I could not delete using a Easy to boot USB MicroSD. I swapped out one to many Linux iso's it would seem. It took reformatting to get rid of it. I used defraggler to look at the data to see why I had less storage. I use sdcards for Xbox 360 game installs, and they are quite fast.

  • @kalebyoung4098
    @kalebyoung4098 Před rokem +1

    How do you install onto an SSD and are there any limitations or pitfalls to look out for?

  • @vgtheory
    @vgtheory Před rokem

    I use an SD-to-IDE adapter on a Mac Mini G4 as well as a P3 build and i've been pretty happy with this configuration. I have it set up so I can easily swap out cards to change operating systems or, in the case of the P3, writing files from my primary PC. I also have a 256 GB SSD in a P4 with native SATA ports that I use for moderately higher spec 98/XP era games.

  • @WillianSantos-yp6vh
    @WillianSantos-yp6vh Před rokem

    It works! Thanks a lot.

  • @E-Box
    @E-Box Před rokem +1

    I've been using a Startech 35BAYCF2IDE for swapping between Compact Flash cards,
    but I've been thinking of swapping to a IcyDock MB521SP-B so I can hotswap between 2.5" SSDs instead. They're cheap enough these days, but I haven't committed.

  • @darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893

    I have just ordered 2 different SD micro for mSATA... But I do wonder if the issue with speed might be the bridge. I did wonder if there are any standard SD's bridges to mSATA that might be able to better with a SD with Micro but I would need to test that.

  • @retrobrw919
    @retrobrw919 Před rokem +9

    I use SD cards in almost all my windows 95/98 machines. 32GB SD cards are like $10-15, super cheap, super easy to replace. I've been trying to eliminate mechanical HDD from everything I own, as I find them too unreliable and have had dozens die over the years.

    • @whosonedphone
      @whosonedphone Před rokem

      I love the sound of those older spinning drives though. Especially the sub 5 GB ones.
      I didn't realize when I was younger that that's where the sound was coming from.

  • @cybersamiches4028
    @cybersamiches4028 Před rokem

    This is awesome!

  • @UpLateGeek
    @UpLateGeek Před rokem +4

    I've had a lot of luck with msata SSDs and various adapters. A while back I went on a bit of a shopping spree on eBay and bought various sizes from 16 to 128GB, and they've all worked great. I haven't done benchmarks though, so I don't have and stats, but they all seem to perform pretty well.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +3

      Adapter shopping sprees are awesome, got to catch em all!

    • @alexsmith8021
      @alexsmith8021 Před rokem +1

      Did the same!

    • @masejoer
      @masejoer Před rokem +1

      Hah, yeah, I have a couple of those shoebox sterilite boxes full of converters. My concern is that many of these things will eventually disappear from the market. I've seen many niche products completely disappear from aliexpress and other such sites, to never be found again.
      Gotta get things while we still can. Not to mention what looks like ever-increasing instability in the world.

  • @Zimiorg
    @Zimiorg Před rokem

    Had an Olivetti Echos P75 laptop once. 75 MHz, 24 MB RAM and a Compact Flash card in a passive IDECF adapter (CF uses already IDE internally). It boosted the machine so hard (only ATA33 but the awesome response time thanks to the CF card

  • @jonchapman6821
    @jonchapman6821 Před rokem +2

    I’ve still got loads of old IDE hard drives (from 40MB to 500GB) so I’m yet to try anything else, BUT I’ve always fancied trying a CF to IDE adapter 🤔

  • @maighstir3003
    @maighstir3003 Před rokem +1

    I was going to comment on wanting to see a comparison including 2.5" IDE to M.2 SATA or mSATA adapters, but you mentioned that while I was typing, so instead I typed a longer message on what I was going to type.
    Anyway, in my Pentium III machine running Windows 2000, I use an IDE to CF adapter, in which I have an adapter to use SD cards instead of CF, and then another to use micro-SD (yeah, three adapters between the motherboard and actual storage device). Wear leveling isn't a huge issue there as it's not used all that much, I wanted the option to simply swap out the card for one with another OS (the "CF" card sticks out from a PCI slot), and SD cards (micro or not) are easier to find than CF ones. In some other machines that use 2.5" IDE drives, I use 2.5" IDE to M.2 SATA adapters.

  • @nobodycares3333
    @nobodycares3333 Před rokem +1

    I am actually planning to build
    Over powered retro gaming pc
    For older titles and get the 2000ish Gaming experience (running older things on windows 10 or 11 is a pain)
    & This video was actually helpful...!!!

  • @timneumann7184
    @timneumann7184 Před rokem +4

    Very cool video Phil! How about doing the same thing with Windows XP? I'm attempting to do a fresh XP install onto a SSD for the first time, a lot of "pot holes" looming!

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +2

      SSDs work great with XP! Make sure to align partitions and you're good to go.

    • @alexsmith8021
      @alexsmith8021 Před rokem

      @@philscomputerlab also cf cards! Also maybe if they have wear leveling. Thanks!

  • @fujitsubo3323
    @fujitsubo3323 Před rokem

    hey phill using a sata dock with an ssd is there a way you can think of to pre image windows 98 se onto a ssd before sticking it into a 98 machine with a startech adapter ? like use gparted set boot flags to LBA set partition to 128gb and then somehow copy over the 98 install files so the machine just has to be booted and install windows without messing around with a cd and Fdisk is this something you have covered before it a previous video ?

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 11 měsíci

      I tried this a few times and it works on the same drive, but then if I image it onto another drive sometimes it fails to work...

  • @Neksus-M06
    @Neksus-M06 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this one.
    I'd like to see your basement, with all your machines :) I know it's not going to happen :(

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      I wish I had a basement! It would make my logistic easier. My next place, I think I want a double garage to use as my lab 🙂

  • @Blasterxp
    @Blasterxp Před rokem

    After filling up, is trim used? Or are the ssd card so as hell?

  • @superconductives88
    @superconductives88 Před rokem +1

    Thanks much for this. Any chance you could do an SD card vs equivalent compactflash comparison? CF is native IDE interface so I wonder if better performance because of that.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      I have a fast CF card but it doesn't have an A1 or A2 rating like SD card, meaning it hasn't evolved to be used as storage in smart phones or game consoles. It's still mainly used for photography...

  • @KoenOnbekend
    @KoenOnbekend Před rokem

    What about SSDs that have an IDE interface like the Transcend PSD330 range?

  • @wbahnassi
    @wbahnassi Před rokem +1

    For older mobos (386/486) connecting anything larger than 500MB prevents POST altogether. E.g. connect a CF2IDE adapter, and use 256MB CF card, works. Use 512MB CF card, black screen. I even used 256MB SD card via SD2CF card adapter inserted into the CF2IDE, and that also results in a black screen.

  • @CLS2086
    @CLS2086 Před rokem +1

    The installation of W98 just give you a good idea of speed transfert. But the use is something else. In my case I used an Amd 5x86 on a 486DX4-VLB motherboard with and without an IDE controler with 16mb of Cache Ram, after some Power Cycles/Reset, I have data corruption on SD/CF cards but never with HDD whatever the FSB/CPU/ISA bus speed. It happen faster when the IDE controler doesn't have ram cache.

  • @aah134-K
    @aah134-K Před rokem

    Did we travel back in time, or is there any one still in old windows?

  • @TurboBass
    @TurboBass Před rokem +3

    If I had a retro PC I would likely use a SATA to IDE drive. SD and CF cards are cool in situations, but I think that the r/w life of the SSD would be beneficial as I assume I would be using it often and for many years.

  • @lukemarvin
    @lukemarvin Před rokem +1

    Yeah I too would like to see Compact Flash in the next head-to-head.

  • @hudy7891
    @hudy7891 Před rokem

    Man, thanks. The bot works fine, but where do I get the names of the new tokens?

  • @TheMasterWanker
    @TheMasterWanker Před rokem

    Could the inbetween card not in the future maybe take advances of the A2?

  • @Nedski42YT
    @Nedski42YT Před rokem

    I'd like to see you also benchmark CompactFlash cards. I recently built a retro-PC for Windows 98 and Windows XP. I tried SATA SSD's but it didn't seem very reliable so I switched to a removable CF-IDE adapter hanging out of the back of the PC. I physically switch cards instead of trying to dual boot from one card. CF cards are still available. My cards were leftovers from my Canon DSLR's.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +1

      I looked at CF prices and they are a lot more than SD cards and no mentioning about A1 / A2 application performance rating which is important for running Windows.

    • @Nedski42YT
      @Nedski42YT Před rokem

      @@philscomputerlab Thanks. Application Performance Rating is new to me so I was unaware of its significance. My CF cards were purchased over ten years ago when the SD vs CF price disparity was not so great!

  • @mjmonjure
    @mjmonjure Před 11 měsíci

    Hi Phil, there are 2 versions of the 40gb Seagate Barracuda. The one you are using is the IDE version, but there was a SATA version, same model number, just ending with AS instead of A. Do you think that there would be any throughput penalties if using a SATA-IDE adaptor (like the Startech for example) with the SATA version of the Barracuda?

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 11 měsíci

      With a size of that vintage, there will be basically no performance impact. Fun fact, do you remember the first WD Raptor? Guess what, it has an integrated SATA - IDE converter (Marvel Chip), same as the StarTech.

    • @mjmonjure
      @mjmonjure Před 11 měsíci

      @@philscomputerlab Thanks! Very interesting, I have a few Raptor’s in a box in the basement, the earliest/smallest being the 75gb.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 11 měsíci

      @@mjmonjure That might be the one! It's SATA but when you look close you can see the Marvel bridge chip LOL

  • @andrewspode
    @andrewspode Před rokem +5

    A great video and novel approach, but I feel this benchmark skews in favour of write speeds a little too much. An SD card will likely be far better at random seek reads than a physical disk.

  • @AntonFetzer
    @AntonFetzer Před rokem

    What about IDE Flash DOM (Disk on Module)?
    I bought some 8GB IDE flash modules that plug directly into the IDE port on the Mainboard and with them the PC seems quite snappy.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      They command a premium and haven't had the urge to buy and test one yet 😅

  • @darkijah-andersjehovahsn7893

    Also have 4 standard size 128GB mSATA harddrives for testing different systems on the way although the Slim computer I am getting is made for Half size, there exist adapters to get around that issue and it is much cheaper then to buy the Half Sizes which only goes up to 512GB as well.
    So... Looking around and sorting out my things. Hope my first Slim unit will be able to do Windows 2000 pro.

  • @clintcolombin
    @clintcolombin Před rokem +11

    I've recently had 3 Seagate drives exactly like the one in this video all fail the same way: component burnout on the controller board. That's why I'm exploring options like these.
    While CF is the easiest, the SATA to PATA adaptors usually work well too. Those are compatible with smaller SSDs that should fit within the bios capacity limits of some of my systems, so that may be the next experiment.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +1

      Unlucky with those drives failing. Yea SATA to IDE worked well for me, but I didn't have SSDs with 32GB size until recently, found them on eBay...

    • @bazzle592
      @bazzle592 Před rokem

      usually I associate burnt up chips with frozen spindle motors (high stall current fries the motor driver), but those are pretty modern drives to be failing like that. I wonder what's popping...

    • @clintcolombin
      @clintcolombin Před rokem

      @@bazzle592I think you may be on to something. The failures all relate to a short circuit tripping the psu protections. Burnouts are all in the same area of the drive pcb too.

    • @ZeroHourProductions407
      @ZeroHourProductions407 Před rokem +1

      Uhm, how?
      Windows 98se only supports booting off of a 128gb drive, maximum. It can *access* larger hard drives, but it can't *boot* from one.

    • @LeeMc007
      @LeeMc007 Před rokem

      @@clintcolombin All on the same system/PSU Clint ?
      That's an odd one.

  • @Drucklufttroete
    @Drucklufttroete Před rokem

    Is there a noticeable difference in performance between IDE-SATA adapters and PCI SATA controllers? I'm using a the latter in my Pentium M build and I get around 100 MB/s with a cheap SSD.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      PC SATA controller can be a little bit faster in terms of transfer rate, saturating the PCI bus with 133 MBps basically. But in terms of access time and real noticable differences, I doubt you will notice it.

  • @JohnSmith-xq1pz
    @JohnSmith-xq1pz Před rokem +1

    If I ever get a 386 class, Pentium era machine for DOS and 9x gaming I'll be definitely getting one of those SD2IDE cards

  • @appwraith
    @appwraith Před rokem +6

    Very good comparison, I have to say I am surprised. I use SD cards in all my retro PCs, and while I've done no comparisons, I would have assumed that SD cards would run rounds around HDDs. Even in my 386 I use a 256MB SD card, and the system feels very fast.

    • @dallesamllhals9161
      @dallesamllhals9161 Před rokem

      Win98 onna' 386? ;-P

    • @gen_angry
      @gen_angry Před rokem +1

      You're mostly seeing the benefit of zero seek time, the 386 doesn't have the speed to cap out the card or adapter. Once you start getting past 20mb/sec read/write speeds, the part choice starts to matter.

  • @fattomandeibu
    @fattomandeibu Před rokem

    I'm thinking of getting a CF card based one for my old Amiga 1200. The 30 year old hard disk is really creaking, even failing to boot more often than not.
    I can't go for the SSD option even if I wanted to due to lack of space in the case(there is a laptop style 2.5" bay for the IDE hard disk to slot into and that is all), but the Amiga doesn't even require anywhere near those read speeds in any case and the CF card will more than suffice. Not so different from running DOS games.

  • @jeremiefaucher-goulet3365

    I would have loved to see CF compared along with SD.

  • @nicokagayama3256
    @nicokagayama3256 Před rokem

    Maybe you are looking for a CF card for better compatibility. The CF interface is native IDE using its native UDMA commands. No latency caused by strange adapters in between. The adapters to 40 pin IDE are passive without controller chip(s)

  • @ruralthunder8854
    @ruralthunder8854 Před rokem +1

    I've had good luck with these for Win 98 machines. I tried using them with a Gateway DX-50 486 machine, but formatting in DOS would not work. Then I tried with a compact flash card and that didn't work either. Couldn't get DOS to boot, even though the drive showed as formatted. I've heard some machines can have issues with the BIOS and these HDD upgrades. Have you ever run into this problem?

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      It's possible that the BIOS can only handle basic CHS drives, and I believe these adapters need a more modern BIOS. If it doesn't boot, you have to run fdisk/mbr once with every factory new flash based storage. It will simply not boot otherwise.

  • @alexsmith8021
    @alexsmith8021 Před rokem

    Great video sir! I bought all of the "3" different kinds of msata to ide adapters off of amazon and stick to ableconn adapters because they emulate 16 sector transfers with dma150 something and the other 2, black and white plastic boxes only emulate 2 sectors. Most would say it's not worth the high price of the ableconn but I like the small improvement it makes. Now I have like 15 of them and they are loaded with transcend 64gb msata ssds because they still make them new, otherwise I would get Samsung. I went with msata over m.2 because m.2 drives supposedly blank themselves with the bad power from old psu's but mainly the prices are higher and it's a lot more research to find models with high random Io controllers. Windows and dos only see what the bios can handle and the rest I use for a custom tiny windows XP to backup the fat16/32 partitions. Thanks!

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem +1

      Vaseky works well for me but also tested one that was poor. I have more to test though ... 2nd hand SSDs also worth considering...

  • @mathiasragginger4322
    @mathiasragginger4322 Před rokem +1

    Have you ever tried an IDE SSD? I know there are some on the market but have never tried any of them myself.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      Not yet, haven't found a good price yet vs adapter + SD card...

  • @GTFour
    @GTFour Před rokem

    Have you tried compact flash? It’s directly IDE compatible with a cheap passive pass through pin to pin board adapter and the extreme pro cards are 160 MB/s!

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před rokem

      Yes I have! SD cards are cheaper and easier to find however. And I'm not sure if CF cards have improved in regards to write performance with small files, like SD cards have.

    • @GTFour
      @GTFour Před rokem

      @@philscomputerlab Yeah that's fair enough. I've just got a large 160 MB/S CF card to see how it performs on laptop PCMCIA connector, which I think might be straight in to the PCI bus? 🤷‍♂Going to try to see how quick it is as a way to move games ISOs I want to play between modern PC and laptop. I might get another to boot Windows 98 off for the main laptop IDE drive too.

  • @osgrov
    @osgrov Před rokem +13

    I much prefer using a HDD when possible. I love how they sound, and a silent retro-PC just feels..wrong. :)
    I've had pretty good luck with reusing a bunch of WD 160GB drives I got from some old office PCs a couple of years ago, and they perform very well. The bottleneck back then wasn't really the storage device but IDE, so a fast SSD doesn't help that much with performance - as you witnessed.
    Anyway, great video Phil - as always. :)

    • @2BuckFridays
      @2BuckFridays Před rokem +2

      I've just been bit so many times by old HDDs, just last night I went to hook up my 98 machine and boom, HDD is completely dead. I've gotten to where I use SSDs in most of my old machines, but I hook up a really loud IDE HDD as a secondary drive because I do like the noise.

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Před rokem

      @@2BuckFridays Its not legit, because HDD has to do seek noices, when you do something, while if it is only there as data drive, it doesn't do those sounds, only running.

    • @elixier33
      @elixier33 Před rokem

      @@warrax111 wintendo still uses that other drive for caching and virtual memory oh don't forget the annoying indexing feature. Gonna hear it regardless all the time. If anything it really annoys me.

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Před rokem

      @@elixier33 It's because, you need to hear it synchronized with the tasks you are doing. You have it unsynchronized. :)

  • @nikolaievans2432
    @nikolaievans2432 Před 3 měsíci

    Is it possible to install drivers for native sata motherboards you know ones that have sata and ide controllers

  • @retro-computing-gaming
    @retro-computing-gaming Před rokem +1

    I recently spotted an obscure storage medium: A 16GB disk-on-module that connects directly to a 9-pin USB motherboard header. I've been tempted to buy one and see how it performs.

    • @gen_angry
      @gen_angry Před rokem

      Not that great of an idea just solely because of the USB bus. Win98 is USB aware and there's a lot of serious compatibility issues with installing to any USB disk. You might be able to get it to work but the amount of hoops you'd go through would make it not really worthwhile.
      I'd wager that's mostly made for something like a linux server boot (freenas/truenas used to recommend using a USB drive for the boot)

  • @mariushmedias
    @mariushmedias Před rokem +1

    The controller on the IDE-SD adapter needs to support those higher speed grades and communication methods - may be worth looking at the chip datasheet to figure what's the maximum supported.
    Also, you should look at buying some IDE SSDs - Transcend makes some, Apacer makes some, they were available in 16/32/64 GB ... also there's some old 8 / 16 GB ide SSDs pulled from thin clients on e bay, with low write counts.

    • @mikebeutler84
      @mikebeutler84 Před rokem

      I have one IDE SSD and it's much slower than the A1 rated SD cards. Plus it cost a lot more.

  • @creopard
    @creopard Před rokem +4

    I'm also using SD cards in 486 and K6-III systems with that "Sintechi SD to IDE" since @Philscomputerlab intrduced them in a video back then. But I guess these very old CPUs/Motherboards (lacking even UDMA33) won't profit much from using a SSD.

  • @isaacchou8625
    @isaacchou8625 Před rokem +2

    How about trying M.2?

  • @realLuisGiordano
    @realLuisGiordano Před rokem

    I'd suggest to use SD cards rated for long periods of constant writing and erasing cycles (like in dashcams), such as Samsung Pro Endurance or SanDisk High Endurance series. They are guaranteed to last for longer periods before failing and corrupting files