Dell Inspiron 530 - SSD Worth it?

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I'm going to be upgrading my Dell Inspiron 530 (2.0 Ghz Intel Dual Core CPU, 3 GB RAM) to windows 7 soon, and rather than backup and reformat my existing drive, I'm planning on getting a 2nd drive to replace my current primary, and moving it to a secondary. Thus, this seems like an excellent time to get a solid-state drive, if its going to be worth it. As far as I can tell this machine has a SATA-I controller, and I'm unsure if I'll see a noticeable performance increase with an SSD without going to SATA-II.

So I have a three part question here given all that:

  1. Will spending the money on a SSD be worth it if hook it into a SATA-I controller?

  2. Is it reasonable to upgrade the controller on this machine to a SATA-II controller?

  3. Given that this PC is kind of old to begin with, am I better off performance wise to just stick with a faster HDD?

DrFredEdison

Posted 2009-11-04T17:59:53.250

Reputation: 729

Question was closed 2012-11-15T17:24:32.167

Answers

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  1. yes, Intel X-25 for performance or OCZ Vertex for value.

  2. yes, altough not a necessity, the controller costs only $20.

  3. no, the SSD will outperform even the fastest platter HDD.

Molly7244

Posted 2009-11-04T17:59:53.250

Reputation:

do you mean Intel X-25? as far as I can tell, IBM doesn't make SSD's – DrFredEdison – 2009-11-04T20:27:47.853

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I would also look into the Seagate Momentus XT if you don't want to drop a tonne of money on a SSD.

brandon927

Posted 2009-11-04T17:59:53.250

Reputation: 1 039

Didn't know they made hybrid drives. That's cool! – mpen – 2010-09-30T07:25:30.757

I was thinking of picking one up to put into my 2 year old Acer to bring some more life into it. – brandon927 – 2010-09-30T07:27:50.697

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Spending on an SSD would definitely benefit; provided you rely too much on read/write operations like video editing, photoshop etc. read/writing large chunks of data would be beneficial..

RockBow

Posted 2009-11-04T17:59:53.250

Reputation: 19