Speeding up the Acer R3610 - Printable Version +- Kodi Community Forum (https://forum.kodi.tv) +-- Forum: Discussions (https://forum.kodi.tv/forumdisplay.php?fid=222) +--- Forum: Hardware (https://forum.kodi.tv/forumdisplay.php?fid=112) +--- Thread: Speeding up the Acer R3610 (/showthread.php?tid=78360) |
Speeding up the Acer R3610 - skunkfu - 2010-08-04 Hello chaps, I looking for a way to speed up the Revo by means of hard drive speed. I'm currently using XBMC-Live with the accompanied 160GB hard drive. Is it faster to run XBMC installed to a SD card, using a cheap SSD, or compactflash? I'm not sure if I can use a CF, but there is another I'm hoping for answer Thanks! - poofyhairguy - 2010-08-04 I love my SSD + ION! - skunkfu - 2010-08-04 Oh very good poofy Any other suggestions besides SSD? I admit it, I'm cheap. - cable_guy - 2010-09-26 I'd also like to know this. I wondered if it made a difference what speed (class) SD card or USB stick you use? - Hannes The Hun - 2010-09-26 the factory installed drive is super-slow. I already got a decent speed boost by installing a 7200rpm drive, but an SSD greatly improves overall system speed. we have a lot of SSD threads here, a small 40GB drive for around 100$ is enough (intel, ocz, etc) and forget the usb or SD-card solutions, way too slow. - cable_guy - 2010-09-26 Hannes The Hun Wrote:and forget the usb or SD-card solutions, way too slow. interested in that comment, how come? Is there any merit in trying a Class 10 SD Card? Is there any way to do benchmarks or do we just test by how snappy we think the GUI performs? One more question : With XBMC live, where does it store the thumbnails and gallery info? I can imagine the speed of access to the database with those in is paramount. Speeding up a Revo 3610 - Driver 944 - 2010-10-08 I want to address the OP with information that may be useful. Once upon a time I was in the same spot he is in. First, a disclaimer. I'm new to all this, I have a few answers and they may be wrong .... but I'll give it a go. I have a REVO 3610, OCZ Onyx 32GB, 3GB RAM running Linux Mint 9 "Isadora", XBMC/Linux. I got the following numbers using Disk Utility in Mint 9. I'm not sure how accurate the program is, but I know it's difficult to find any benchmark comparisons. Here is a list of everything I've tried with XBMC. Transcend SDHC 4GB (class 6) Partition type: Linux (0x83) Min. read rate: 15.3 MB/s Max. read rate: 20.4 MB/s Avg. read rate: 18.6 MB/s Avg. Access Time: 1.4 ms Patriot XT 8GB (USB 2.0) Partition type: FAT32 Min. read rate: 33.2 MB/s Max. read rate: 34.7 MB/s Avg. read rate: 34.2 MB/s Avg. Access Time: 0.8 ms Hatachi 250GB SATA Hard drive - original disk with the Revo, converted to a portable USB drive. Partition type: NTFS Min. read rate: 40.6 MB/s Max. read rate: 86.1 MB/s Avg. read rate: 67.2 MB/s Avg. Access Time: 18.1 ms OCZ Onyx 32GB Partition type: Linux (0x83) Ext4 (V1.0) Min. read rate: 127.5 MB/s Max. read rate: 150.2 MB/s Avg. read rate: 145 MB/s Avg. Access Time: 0.2 ms I would recommend the 32GB OCZ Onyx. It's perfect for my needs and you can buy one from NewEgg for around 52.00 when the have a special. I know some of the others are using bigger, better and more expensive SSD's, but I can't justify the extra money for use on a REVO. I hope this will help someone. I got so much from this site I want to try to give something back. - poofyhairguy - 2010-10-08 Wow that is awesome! - Geeba - 2010-10-08 Corsair F40 - 40Gb SSD read 280MB/s write 270MB/s for only £83! it BLAZES! every review on Ebuyer is 5/5. And use the fastest memory the board can support..... for instance if the board can support 667/800 dont put 667 value RAM in it.. for a few quid more sling some Kingston 800 in there! |