Corsair Accelerator 30GB & 60GB Review
ccokeman - July 8, 2012» Discuss this article (13)
Testing:
Testing of hard drives can be done in several different ways – one method involves leaving the drive bare and connecting it as a secondary drive in an existing system. By simultaneously cleaning the drive after each benchmark run-through, this allows you to see its theoretical peaks in performance. However, these results would only represent a best-case scenario – one that you may never see unless operating a bare drive. The second method, which OverclockersClub employs, involves loading the operating system and benchmarking suite onto the test drive itself. This would give performance results that emulate real-world usage more closely. Testing will be completed with the P67-based system listed below, alongside a fresh install of Windows 7 Professional 64-bit that is updated to SP1 and fully patched as of the date of testing. The latest Intel Rapid Storage technology drivers and software have also been installed. All tests are conducted with the drive connected to a native SATA III 6 Gb/s port on the motherboard, in an effort to eliminate any possible bottlenecks with performance.
Testing Setup:
- Processors: Core i7 2600K @ 3.4 GHz 100 x 34
- CPU Cooling: Corsair Hydro Series H100
- Motherboard: ASUS Maximus IV Extreme
- Memory: Mushkin Redline PC317000 9-11-10-27 1866 MHz 8 GB
- Video Card: XFX HD 7970 Black Edition
- Power Supply: Corsair AX1200
- Hard Drive: 1 x Seagate 1TB SATA, Corsair Accelerator 30/60GB
- Optical Drive: Lite-On Blu-Ray
- Case: Corsair Obsidian 650D
- OS: Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
Comparison Drives:
Benchmarks:
- Drive Tests:
- HD Tune 4.60 Pro
- HD Tach
- SiSoft Sandra 2012
- Crystal Disk Mark
- ATTO Disk Benchmark
- AS SSD
- PCMark Vantage
- PCMark 7
- Windows Startup / Shutdown

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