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I never thought this will be soo difficult but without opening up my laptop how do I identify if the dvd drive in my laptop is SATA or not.
And incase its SATA then is it SATA - II?
I am ok with installing 3rd party utilities to find this out.
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I never thought this will be soo difficult but without opening up my laptop how do I identify if the dvd drive in my laptop is SATA or not.
And incase its SATA then is it SATA - II?
I am ok with installing 3rd party utilities to find this out.
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Use HWInfo to enumerate all hardware attached to it. It will give a summary page with the things HWInfo maker believes you care most (CPU, Motherboard, GPU, RAM), and the detailed view which will include all other stuff attached to your hardware (as far as they can recognize).
And since they have a zipped / standalone version, you don't need to install it. Check for an entry under Drives - (S)ATA/ATAPI Drives and if your drive is listed under there, it is SATA drive.
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And incase its SATA then is it SATA - II?
It does not matter if it is SATA I , SATA II or SATA III. These are backward compatible. You only need to worry about that if you use something which needs a lot of speed such as a SSD or a dozen HDD behind a port multiplexor.
I am ok with installing 3rd party utilities to find this out.
No third party software might be needed. Try [Start] run'
Compmgmt.msc` and go to the device manager. Look for AHCI controllers. If you find any at all you are almost guaranteed to have an SATA based chipset and only SATA based devices.
If you want ot be 100% sure that you do not have a device with both SATA and IDE, then boot a linux or BSD live DC and run either lspci
or pciconf
. Those will list all devices in your system. Both those with and those without attached drivers.
Thanks for the detailed reply! I do have SATA controller in device manager: http://snag.gy/PA7ra.jpg . And SATA II or not matters because I want to replace DVD-ROM with a SSD caddy. So just want to know beforehand the speed I should expect and if SSD will be beneficial or not. I tried some 3rd part S/Ws and they reported SATA-II for HDD. I think DVD interface will also be SATA-II then?
– Jags – 2013-09-05T07:05:03.600It depends how they reported it. If they said 'SATA-2 Link` then yes. If they said 'that DVD is a SATA-2 device' without reporting what it was connected to; possibly not (it could be a Sata-2 device on a SATA-1 bus). As to speeds: By all means get a SSD. They are great. And their main benefit is not sequantial throughput but semi-random 4K IO. That will work regardless of which SATA link you use. – Hennes – 2013-09-05T13:00:00.553
Toshiba only said: http://cdgenp01.csd.toshiba.com/content/product/pdf_files/detailed_specs/satellite_L655-S5107.pdf DVD SuperMulti Drive . No mention of SATA or IDE
– Jags – 2013-09-05T14:30:14.680From the manual you linked from: Mobile Intel HM55 Express Chipset . Looking up that chipset at Intel: http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/chipsets/mainstream-chipsets/mobile-chipset-hm55.html. A third of the way down the page: Serial ATA (SATA) 3 Gb/s (so, SATA-II).
– Hennes – 2013-09-05T14:32:56.9401
Try SIW (there's a free version) at http://www.gtopala.com. It will even tell you if a USB-connected drive is SATA or PATA. Very useful piece of kit - highly recommended.
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For future readers who found this in an Internet search: In device manager, click on "View" menu button, and select "Devices by connection". Then just drill down to the SATA and PATA controllers. This should work roughly the same on every Windows OS going back to Windows NT. I don't remember if it works this way on 95, but it should.
2Not guaranteed to work; many desktops and sometimes even laptops have a firmware option to present the disk controller as IDE instead of AHCI (especially because Windows didn't get native AHCI support until Vista). I think Device Manager on my old Pentium 4 desktop still showed items practically indistinguishable from an IDE controller (with primary/secondary channels, PIO mode, and all) despite clearly using physical SATA connectors. – user1686 – 2019-02-10T18:05:28.203
@MGOwen The original question is whether it has SATA or not (and whether it is SATA I or SATA II). You are correct as SATA II is only able to handle up to 300MBps, and yet some more expensive SSD (Samsung 850 Pro) claims Read/Write speed of up to 500MBps, but there are some cheaper SSD that claims 500MBps read (which with SATA-II will be capped to 300MBps) but write speed of only 50MBps, by which SATA-II will no longer be the bottleneck). I did put this answer in 2013 when I saw rather dismal performance in SSD, but this has surely improved a whole lot by now. – Darius – 2014-08-12T23:56:49.820
I tried this one and it said ATAPI for the DVD Rom..so is ATAPI = SATA? The reason why I need to know is that because I am looking to plug in a SSD caddy inplace of DVD-ROM..so just want to be sure that SSD will get good read/write speed in that case. – Jags – 2013-09-05T06:59:49.903
What make / model of your laptop? You usually can find out exactly what is inside the laptop from the manufacturer page. About SSD good read and write, that really depends on the SSD itself. And to be honest lots of random brand SSD can't handle any faster than SATA-I speed, so it may not matter at all. – Darius – 2013-09-05T11:51:19.177
I checked the detailed specs 1st: http://cdgenp01.csd.toshiba.com/content/product/pdf_files/detailed_specs/satellite_L655-S5107.pdf but it only says HDD SATA and DVD SuperMulti Drive
– Jags – 2013-09-05T14:29:23.003Good catch on the specs. It shows it is using HM55 Express Chipset and on intel website it mentioned that it has SATA support, and no IDE support, so you can safely assume that the DVD drive is SATA. But again, whether the SSD will perform good or not, is entirely depends on the SSD HD. – Darius – 2013-09-05T15:07:37.710
@Darius, that sounds wrong. In desktops, anything less than SATA II will slow down most modern SSDs. Is it different in laptops? – MGOwen – 2014-06-11T05:34:03.357