Tuesday, August 27th 2013

Intel to Demo SSD Overclocking at IDF 2013

It could soon become possible to overclock the controller and NAND flash of your SSD, if Intel has its way. The company is set to demonstrate how to overclock Intel-branded SSDs using its Xtreme Tuning Utility (XTU), at IDF 2013, which goes underway this September. The item on Intel's IDF itinerary marked "AIOS001" deals with seminars on overclocking Intel's next-generation HEDT (high-end desktop) platforms. X-bit Labs believes Intel could talk about SSD overclocking during that session.

Options to tweak SSDs were discovered when poking around the code of an unreleased XTU version. XTU is a unified software utility by Intel, which lets you tweak CPU, memory, and system cooling on systems running Intel Desktop Boards. Among the things end-users should be able to tweak, apart from the controller clock-speed, are the NAND flash bus-speed. Taking away interface overheads and other round-offs, 560 MB/s appears to be the practical maximum bandwidth SATA 6 Gb/s SSDs have been able to achieve. It could always be handy getting your SSD a few dozen more MB/s sequential speeds at the expense of stability.
Sources: MyCE, X-bit Labs
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28 Comments on Intel to Demo SSD Overclocking at IDF 2013

#1
FR@NK
WTB: Heatsink w/fan for my SSDs

:/
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#2
Prima.Vera
I wonder if liquid cooling is on the way ;)
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#3
RCoon
Overclocking something that contains data is a no-go for me. I'll stick with gpu/cpu/memory thanks...
Posted on Reply
#4
Fiery
FinalWire / AIDA64 Developer
They should much rather work on eliminating the stupid bottleneck of the SATA 6.0 Gbps interface. Overclocking SSDs will lead to similar issues than when in the old days people overclocked the FSB with VLB IDE controllers (anyone remembers those?), and the data on HDDs started to get "mysteriously" corrupted. No, thanks, not again :)
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#5
MicroUnC
Sounds like another marketing move!
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#6
librin.so.1
"Look guys! I've OC'ed my SSD and got several more megs a second of write/read speeds! ...I can't find half of my files, though. Seems to have mysteriously disappeared somewhere. I suppose I'm just a bit tired and will find everything tomorrow after a good night's sleep."
RCoonOverclocking something that contains data is a no-go for me.
You mean, non-volatile data? :P
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#7
iO
Sounds like the PR guys came up with some super-unique feature by taking some line of products, cripple them artifically via downclocking and only let them run at full speed when paired with their pricey high-end chipsets...
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#8
Fourstaff
FieryThey should much rather work on eliminating the stupid bottleneck of the SATA 6.0 Gbps interface.
Working on it: NVM Express and Sata 3.2. NVM Express uses PCI-E, while Sata 3.2 is a slight increase over Sata 3.2.
iOSounds like the PR guys came up with some super-unique feature by taking some line of products, cripple them artifically via downclocking and only let them run at full speed when paired with their pricey high-end chipsets...
You always run things at most stable clock, not fastest possible. If they want to cripple their products via downclocking they are welcome. Just bear in mind that semiconductor industry is has wafer thin margins (pun not intended), and small performance increase will completely tilt the favour to the other company.
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#9
Agility
And comes the day where companies start lowering the warranty coverage and increases the cost on the "featured" overclocking power of their SSD.
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#11
TheLostSwede
News Editor
You guys are clearly not following what's been going on in the SSD scene :p

It's about PCI Express based SSD's. Overclock the PCI Express bus = moar SSD performance.
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#12
Feänor
TheLostSwedeIt's about PCI Express based SSD's. Overclock the PCI Express bus = moar SSD performance.
Since when overclocking the pci-e bus is a good thing? The last three intel cpu generation (sandy, ivy and haswell) are all limited to 5-10% max bclk variation, mostly because the pci-e bus really doesn't like to be set at anything but 100 mhz.

And i don't think the pci-e will be the bottleneck, as to this day nothing comes close to saturating a pci-e 4x slot! (and don't tell me that 20 ssd in raid 0 can, you'll just prove my point...)
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#13
TheDeeGee
If there is anything i wouldn't wanna f**k with it's this.

Data is too valuable to screw with.
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#14
WithoutWeakness
Last line of the article:

"It could always be handy getting your SSD a few dozen more MB/s sequential speeds at the expense of stability."

That's an absurd statement. It's not at all "handy" to raise data throughput at the expense of stability. Everything in a PC should always be 100% stable under maximum load. The last thing you should be tweaking to the point of instability is your storage system.
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#15
TheDeeGee
They should focus on making affordable 1TB+ SSDs for Storage with just 100 MB Read/Writes, can't be that hard.
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#16
NdMk2o1o
SvarogThey should focus on making affordable 1TB+ SSDs for Storage with just 100 MB Read/Writes, can't be that hard.
They have HDD's for that, what's the point in an SSD if it's slower than a mechanical hard drive?
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#17
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
NdMk2o1oThey have HDD's for that, what's the point in an SSD if it's slower than a mechanical hard drive?
Ever done 4k random reads/write on a spinny disk? They're slow. SSDs handle random reads/write vastly better than their HDD counterparts. So even if the sustained read/write speed were to be lackluster, I seriously doubt that access times would be. Also anything that has moving parts is more likely to fail then something that doesn't. SSDs tend to use less power then your normal 3.5" HDD as well.

So no, I can think of a number of reasons why I would want an SSD, for reasons other than bandwidth.

On topic: I think that the idea of overclocking non-volatile storage is a terrible and asinine idea. It's not like it becomes volatile if it can't do it, it just doesn't work. Which is terrible for something that is supposed to be reliable and persistent.
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#18
TheoneandonlyMrK
Prima.VeraI wonder if liquid cooling is on the way
aha a uncovered niche in waterblock land take my godam money already, i dont cares if im not oc'ing or oc'ing it i neeeeds more pipes :roll:

oooh, oc pciex bus = revo go quicker , how did that slip my mind, to the bench,, ahoy<jk:p
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#19
Nordic
theoneandonlymrkaha a uncovered niche in waterblock land take my godam money already, i dont cares if im not oc'ing or oc'ing it i neeeeds more pipes :roll:

oooh, oc pciex bus = revo go quicker , how did that slip my mind, to the bench,, ahoy<jk:p
Watercool your psu
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#20
librin.so.1
james888Watercool your psu
Watercool the cables and the case.
Posted on Reply
#21
Nordic
VinskaWatercool the cables and the case.
You can buy a watercooled power supply. No joke. It could be argued that you can cool a case with any block though.


This one is for any 3.5in hdd.
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#23
xorbe
Hold my beer, watch this.

What could possibly go wrong?

Look how fast I can store useless corrupted data!

Another source for random number generation.
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#25
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
Hayder_Masterit's worth to overclock ?
I love the smell of corrupted data in the morning! Don't you?!
Posted on Reply
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