Intel SSD Overclocking Configurations Leaked Through Extreme Tuning Utility (XTU) – Could Only Be Possible On Selected Intel SSDs
Intel is expected to unveil
SSD overclocking
for the very first time on desktop PC platforms at IDF13 San Francisco.
While little details are available regarding how the SSD
overclocking would work, some new
information has been leaked within the Intel XTU (Extreme
Tuning Utility) found out by MYCE.
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Intel SSD Overclocking Configurations Leaked Through XTU
While the
new feature is expected to debut with Intel’s HEDT Ivy Bridge-E
processors, it will not remain exclusive to the new platform. Intel would later add support of the new feature
to other platforms and possibly even their Haswell platform. MYCE found
out that the Intel XTU application had some code hidden within it that
will be un-locked after Intel makes SSD overclocking official. There are
several options and configurations which are going to be available with
the updated Intel XTU allowing users to manually
overclock their SSDs for faster speeds.
Users would be able to adjust the frequency
of the SSD controller in MHz and would also be able to set the power
modes of the SSD ranging from ‘limited’, ‘typical’ or ‘unconstrained’.
Last of all there would be a option to set the bus frequency of the NAND
Flash memory to 83 MHz or 100 MHz. The description of each feature that would be released with the Intel XTU SSD overclocking tool are listed below (Courtesy of MYCE):
- Controller Frequency - ‘Sets the frequency of the specified Intel SSDs on-drive micro-controller’
- Power Mode - ’Sets the power limits for the specified Intel SSD’ (Limited/Typical/Unconstrained)
- NAND Frequency - ‘Sets the NAND bus frequency for the specified Intel SSD’
All of the descriptions clearly state “specified Intel SSDs’ which
may possibly mean that the SSD Overclocking feature would be exclusively
available on selected Intel SSDs. It is also mentioned that boosting
the controller frequency would result in performance gains while NAND
frequency adjustment would give a slight boost but it could possibly
lead to SSD damage or data corruption and loss. Intel would develop some
sort of mechanism to combat data loss and corruption and we are looking
forward to the details they reveal next month.
What we know previously is that while the SSD overclocking sounds
good, in reality the performance gains would be minor since the major
bottleneck is not the read, write speeds or the IOPS but rather the SATA
6 GB/s interface. It looks like it would take a year or so before Intel
would start replacing the SATA 6 GB/s interface with the new SATA
Express interface with rated speeds of 8 GB/s upto 16 GB/s. The new SATA
Express interface would debut next year with the refreshed Haswell Z97 and H97 boards and also on the X99 chipset that would debut in late 2014 with the
Haswell-E HEDT platform. By then, SSD overclocking would prove to be useful since the bottleneck by the current SATA 6 GB/s would be erased.
This article originally appeared on WCCFTech (Link)
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