• Error message.

    From Larry@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 15 16:32:06 2016
    I get the following messages on my Dell precison m6600 since upgrading to Windows 10.

    First this message pops up:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - detected

    Then this message follows in quick succession:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - removed

    Anyone have any idea what these messages mean?

    Thank you!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Adrian Caspersz@21:1/5 to Larry on Thu Aug 18 10:38:44 2016
    On 16/08/16 00:32, Larry wrote:
    I get the following messages on my Dell precison m6600 since upgrading to Windows 10.

    First this message pops up:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - detected

    Then this message follows in quick succession:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - removed

    Anyone have any idea what these messages mean?

    Thank you!

    Disk on port 3, in it's current configuration which was probably set for
    the previous OS, does not support Intel Rapid Storage Technology.

    There are utilities to set this up (look on Dells support site), so that
    it behaves as a SSD cache for your spinning hard disk. If your machine
    without it isn't any different in performance, then you might want to physically remove it.

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    --
    Adrian C

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to Once upon a time on usenet Adrian C on Wed Aug 24 01:04:41 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet Adrian Caspersz wrote:
    On 16/08/16 00:32, Larry wrote:
    I get the following messages on my Dell precison m6600 since
    upgrading to Windows 10. First this message pops up:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - detected

    Then this message follows in quick succession:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - removed

    Anyone have any idea what these messages mean?

    Thank you!

    Disk on port 3, in it's current configuration which was probably set
    for the previous OS, does not support Intel Rapid Storage Technology.

    There are utilities to set this up (look on Dells support site), so
    that it behaves as a SSD cache for your spinning hard disk. If your
    machine without it isn't any different in performance, then you might
    want to physically remove it.

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    Please elaborate Adrian. I have an HP Envy dv6 with a 3rd gen i7, 16GB RAM
    and a FHD matte display that has one. It came with Win 8 and I installed Win
    7 and Intel Rapid Storage Technology - which seems to work but won't 'accelerate' the only partition on the list - drive C:

    I'd love to get it working with W7 as it's quite slow (5,400rpm HDD)
    compared with how responsive it was when 'accelerated' in W8. Do you know if Intel Rapid Storage Technology and SSD acceleration works with W7?
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Adrian Caspersz@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 23 19:33:21 2016
    On 23/08/16 14:04, ~misfit~ wrote:

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    Please elaborate Adrian. I have an HP Envy dv6 with a 3rd gen i7, 16GB RAM and a FHD matte display that has one. It came with Win 8 and I installed Win 7 and Intel Rapid Storage Technology - which seems to work but won't 'accelerate' the only partition on the list - drive C:

    I'd love to get it working with W7 as it's quite slow (5,400rpm HDD)
    compared with how responsive it was when 'accelerated' in W8. Do you know if Intel Rapid Storage Technology and SSD acceleration works with W7?


    Do a search on HP's support website for the exact documents and
    supporting software for your machine, referred by part number, not
    series (i.e. dv6). Yes, Windows 7 is supported.

    http://download.intel.com/support/chipsets/imsm/sb/irst_user_guide.pdf

    That link is a bit old, but goes into some detail how the RAID system is
    setup from the BIOS, and will require non-data safe mucking about with
    volumes and partitions.

    Sorry, my experience is mostly getting rid of it!

    --
    Adrian C

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to Once upon a time on usenet Adrian C on Wed Aug 24 12:41:24 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet Adrian Caspersz wrote:
    On 23/08/16 14:04, ~misfit~ wrote:

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    Please elaborate Adrian. I have an HP Envy dv6 with a 3rd gen i7,
    16GB RAM and a FHD matte display that has one. It came with Win 8
    and I installed Win 7 and Intel Rapid Storage Technology - which
    seems to work but won't 'accelerate' the only partition on the list
    - drive C: I'd love to get it working with W7 as it's quite slow
    (5,400rpm HDD)
    compared with how responsive it was when 'accelerated' in W8. Do you
    know if Intel Rapid Storage Technology and SSD acceleration works
    with W7?

    Do a search on HP's support website for the exact documents and
    supporting software for your machine, referred by part number, not
    series (i.e. dv6). Yes, Windows 7 is supported.

    http://download.intel.com/support/chipsets/imsm/sb/irst_user_guide.pdf

    That link is a bit old, but goes into some detail how the RAID system
    is setup from the BIOS, and will require non-data safe mucking about
    with volumes and partitions.

    Sorry, my experience is mostly getting rid of it!

    Thanks Adrian, I'll check it out. Googling I got the inpression that W7
    wasn't supported on this machine, the HP forums show lots of people using W7 drivers from similar HP machines. Also as I don't have a factory install I
    have to turn off the UEFI part of the boot process and run with a very basic BIOS that has very few options (and none regarding the SATA interface).

    I'll read that Intel document and look further - the project has been on
    hold for a while and I'm still using my older machine for now (which has a Seagate "SSHD" with NAND on board).

    Cheers,
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 25 13:17:30 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet ~misfit~ wrote:
    [snipped]
    All sorted now - thanks!

    When reading that Intel document I saw reference to NCQ and when I
    checked I found that the HDD I'd installed W7 on (intending to clone
    to a bigger disk if all went well) was an older SATA drive that
    didn't support NCQ. I just did a test-clone to a different disk which
    *does* support NCQ and now I can accelerate the drive* using Intel
    Rapid Storage Technology.

    But it's never that bloody simple for me!

    Today it won't boot and, on Googling the model of the HDD (HTS541616J9SA00) *and* "NCQ" I see numerous mentions of improperly implimented NCQ and page titles such as "One more Hitachi HDD to add to NCQ Blacklist".

    Yesterday I just Googled the HDD model number, checked the spec sheet and
    saw it was claimed to support NCQ. I only hope that a clone copy of this HDD onto a better HDD will work as I deleted the partitions on the source HDD
    when all seemed to go well.

    We can also add into the mix the stupidly-designed SATA-to-planar cable that this laptop uses is getting flakey - I had to re-seat it a few times
    yesterday (and tried again after errors).

    http://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c03291169

    The SATA connector was designed to be a universal connector that can handle multiple insertion cycles. I've had nothing but trouble with laptops that insist on having a connector between the HDD and planar over the years -
    you'd think they'd learn! This one is particularly fiddly and fragile.

    Cross your fingers for me. I'll likely have to steal a HDD out of another working laptop to use so I'll need to do at least two clone cycles to see if
    I can finally get this thing running right.
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 30 15:10:35 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet ~misfit~ wrote:
    Once upon a time on usenet ~misfit~ wrote:
    [snipped]
    All sorted now - thanks!

    When reading that Intel document I saw reference to NCQ and when I
    checked I found that the HDD I'd installed W7 on (intending to clone
    to a bigger disk if all went well) was an older SATA drive that
    didn't support NCQ. I just did a test-clone to a different disk which
    *does* support NCQ and now I can accelerate the drive* using Intel
    Rapid Storage Technology.

    But it's never that bloody simple for me!

    Today it won't boot and, on Googling the model of the HDD
    (HTS541616J9SA00) *and* "NCQ" I see numerous mentions of improperly implimented NCQ and page titles such as "One more Hitachi HDD to add
    to NCQ Blacklist".
    Yesterday I just Googled the HDD model number, checked the spec sheet
    and saw it was claimed to support NCQ. I only hope that a clone copy
    of this HDD onto a better HDD will work as I deleted the partitions
    on the source HDD when all seemed to go well.

    We can also add into the mix the stupidly-designed SATA-to-planar
    cable that this laptop uses is getting flakey - I had to re-seat it a
    few times yesterday (and tried again after errors).

    http://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c03291169

    The SATA connector was designed to be a universal connector that can
    handle multiple insertion cycles. I've had nothing but trouble with
    laptops that insist on having a connector between the HDD and planar
    over the years - you'd think they'd learn! This one is particularly
    fiddly and fragile.
    Cross your fingers for me. I'll likely have to steal a HDD out of
    another working laptop to use so I'll need to do at least two clone
    cycles to see if I can finally get this thing running right.

    Installing a 500 GB Seagate Momentus 7200.4 (which I took from my spare T60 after cloning the OS partition onto the 160 GB Hitachi) fixed the problem.
    Now the SSD cache is working as designed. :-)
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to All on Wed Aug 24 16:16:37 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet ~misfit~ wrote:
    Once upon a time on usenet Adrian Caspersz wrote:
    On 23/08/16 14:04, ~misfit~ wrote:

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    Please elaborate Adrian. I have an HP Envy dv6 with a 3rd gen i7,
    16GB RAM and a FHD matte display that has one. It came with Win 8
    and I installed Win 7 and Intel Rapid Storage Technology - which
    seems to work but won't 'accelerate' the only partition on the list
    - drive C: I'd love to get it working with W7 as it's quite slow
    (5,400rpm HDD)
    compared with how responsive it was when 'accelerated' in W8. Do you
    know if Intel Rapid Storage Technology and SSD acceleration works
    with W7?

    Do a search on HP's support website for the exact documents and
    supporting software for your machine, referred by part number, not
    series (i.e. dv6). Yes, Windows 7 is supported.

    http://download.intel.com/support/chipsets/imsm/sb/irst_user_guide.pdf

    That link is a bit old, but goes into some detail how the RAID system
    is setup from the BIOS, and will require non-data safe mucking about
    with volumes and partitions.

    Sorry, my experience is mostly getting rid of it!

    Thanks Adrian, I'll check it out. Googling I got the inpression that
    W7 wasn't supported on this machine, the HP forums show lots of
    people using W7 drivers from similar HP machines. Also as I don't
    have a factory install I have to turn off the UEFI part of the boot
    process and run with a very basic BIOS that has very few options (and
    none regarding the SATA interface).
    I'll read that Intel document and look further - the project has been
    on hold for a while and I'm still using my older machine for now
    (which has a Seagate "SSHD" with NAND on board).

    All sorted now - thanks!

    When reading that Intel document I saw reference to NCQ and when I checked I found that the HDD I'd installed W7 on (intending to clone to a bigger disk
    if all went well) was an older SATA drive that didn't support NCQ. I just
    did a test-clone to a different disk which *does* support NCQ and now I can accelerate the drive* using Intel Rapid Storage Technology.

    [*] I found it odd that I can only accelerate the whole drive rather than a partition. As this HDD is larger than the first one I fitted I made a second partition on it for data and that certainly doesn't need accelerating. I
    hope that the algorithms are smart enough to only accelerate frequently accessed data. The laptop can take a 12.5mm high HDD so I've been
    considering putting a 2TB HDD in there (one day - finances allowing) and, as the thing is so powerful using it ro replace both my 'everyday' highest-spec 15" T60 ThinkPad *and* my desktop that I use for light gaming.

    It's a shame that the Envy dv6 7215TX doesn't have a dock option as I almost always use my T60 in a dock with lots of stuff like printer and externel
    HDDs always connected via ports at the back. The Envy does have 3 x USB3
    ports but they're in places where I wouldn't want cables constantly
    connected. :-/ Oh well, that's what I get for being poor HDDand not being
    able to afford an Elitebook.

    The Envy came to me as a repair / data recovery 'job', it had overheated, cooked it's RAM and HDD and the erstwhile owner was desperate to get her
    data back. I managed to recover the data before the HDD finally stopped spinning and she offered me the laptop in lieu of payment. I told her that,
    if she gave me a week or so to evaluate it and see if I can ressutect it I might be in a position to give her some money for it but she was happy for
    me to have it as she'd been quoted a lot more than it was worth to get her
    data back elsewhere.

    I convinced her to not allow herself to be 'upsold' on a replacement as she
    was sold this powerful beast of a thing when all she wanted to do was light wordprocessing and browsing. As she used it on the go it's no wonder that it ingested so much dust that it choked itself (it didn't help that the factory default was 'fan always runs' in BIOS and up to 100% CPU / GPU on battery in Windows).

    But I digress ...

    Thanks for that document again, it prompted me to check if the HDD was NCQ-capable.
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Adrian Caspersz@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 30 21:20:53 2016
    On 30/08/16 04:10, ~misfit~ wrote:
    The SATA connector was designed to be a universal connector that can
    handle multiple insertion cycles. I've had nothing but trouble with
    laptops that insist on having a connector between the HDD and planar
    over the years - you'd think they'd learn! This one is particularly
    fiddly and fragile.
    Cross your fingers for me. I'll likely have to steal a HDD out of
    another working laptop to use so I'll need to do at least two clone
    cycles to see if I can finally get this thing running right.

    Installing a 500 GB Seagate Momentus 7200.4 (which I took from my spare T60 after cloning the OS partition onto the 160 GB Hitachi) fixed the problem. Now the SSD cache is working as designed. :-)


    Congratulations ;)

    --
    Adrian C

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to Once upon a time on usenet Adrian C on Sat Sep 3 12:01:04 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet Adrian Caspersz wrote:
    On 30/08/16 04:10, ~misfit~ wrote:
    The SATA connector was designed to be a universal connector that can
    handle multiple insertion cycles. I've had nothing but trouble with
    laptops that insist on having a connector between the HDD and planar
    over the years - you'd think they'd learn! This one is particularly
    fiddly and fragile.
    Cross your fingers for me. I'll likely have to steal a HDD out of
    another working laptop to use so I'll need to do at least two clone
    cycles to see if I can finally get this thing running right.

    Installing a 500 GB Seagate Momentus 7200.4 (which I took from my
    spare T60 after cloning the OS partition onto the 160 GB Hitachi)
    fixed the problem. Now the SSD cache is working as designed. :-)


    Congratulations ;)

    Thanks Adrian. :-) It's always good when you get something to work the way
    it's designed to.
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Larry@21:1/5 to Adrian Caspersz on Sun Sep 11 12:30:58 2016
    On Thursday, August 18, 2016 at 3:38:48 AM UTC-6, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
    On 16/08/16 00:32, Larry wrote:
    I get the following messages on my Dell precison m6600 since upgrading to Windows 10.

    First this message pops up:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - detected

    Then this message follows in quick succession:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - removed

    Anyone have any idea what these messages mean?

    Thank you!

    Disk on port 3, in it's current configuration which was probably set for
    the previous OS, does not support Intel Rapid Storage Technology.

    There are utilities to set this up (look on Dells support site), so that
    it behaves as a SSD cache for your spinning hard disk. If your machine without it isn't any different in performance, then you might want to physically remove it.

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    --
    Adrian C

    Hi Adrian,

    Thanks for your response. Not sure I follow your second paragraph. What and how would I remove?

    Larry

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Larry@21:1/5 to Adrian Caspersz on Sun Sep 11 13:31:47 2016
    On Thursday, August 18, 2016 at 3:38:48 AM UTC-6, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
    On 16/08/16 00:32, Larry wrote:
    I get the following messages on my Dell precison m6600 since upgrading to Windows 10.

    First this message pops up:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - detected

    Then this message follows in quick succession:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - removed

    Anyone have any idea what these messages mean?

    Thank you!

    Disk on port 3, in it's current configuration which was probably set for
    the previous OS, does not support Intel Rapid Storage Technology.

    There are utilities to set this up (look on Dells support site), so that
    it behaves as a SSD cache for your spinning hard disk. If your machine without it isn't any different in performance, then you might want to physically remove it.

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    --
    Adrian C

    Hello Adrian,

    Thank you for your response. I am not sure I follow your second paragraph. What would I physically remove?

    Larry

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to Once upon a time on usenet Larry on Mon Sep 12 18:46:51 2016
    Once upon a time on usenet Larry wrote:
    On Thursday, August 18, 2016 at 3:38:48 AM UTC-6, Adrian Caspersz
    wrote:
    On 16/08/16 00:32, Larry wrote:
    I get the following messages on my Dell precison m6600 since
    upgrading to Windows 10.

    First this message pops up:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - detected

    Then this message follows in quick succession:

    Intel Rapid Storage Technology
    disk on port 3 - removed

    Anyone have any idea what these messages mean?

    Thank you!

    Disk on port 3, in it's current configuration which was probably set
    for the previous OS, does not support Intel Rapid Storage Technology.

    There are utilities to set this up (look on Dells support site), so
    that it behaves as a SSD cache for your spinning hard disk. If your
    machine without it isn't any different in performance, then you
    might want to physically remove it.

    I've removed loads of these (small 32GB) SSDs from HP laptops,
    admittedly a corporate OS build didn't support it.

    --
    Adrian C

    Hello Adrian,

    Thank you for your response. I am not sure I follow your second
    paragraph. What would I physically remove?

    Larry

    He's not suggesting that YOU physically remove anything. (They're buried
    deep in the guts of the thing.) He's saying HE removed them due to incompatabilities with the chosen OS.

    I'd say your issue is down to your version of Intel Rapid Storage
    Technology. It probably needs updating to a version that plays nice with
    W10.
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification in the DSM*."
    David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)
    (*Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)