Quiver

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Posts posted by Quiver

  1. Thats mostly due to the fact that more often than not there are instalation problems that have to be overcome when using a SATA as your boot device, and alot of people dont have a clue what they are doing; hence bad reviews... As was mentioned earlier getting a good mothergboard will help tremendously. SATA and IDE drives of that size are very close in price and if you want to have the little added performaces get the SATA.

  2. Sending and recieving commands to the HDD is faster because of the SATA interface. Aswell most SATA drives have a faster seek time than IDE drives. And alot have 16MB of cache which is great for copying lots of smaller files to and from. Definitley faster than an IDE drive, but really not all to significant. If you want performance buy a 100-200Gb IDE drive and stick windows on it then grab another 100-200Gb and put all your games and/or swap file on it. I personaly have 5 drives in this system and let me tell you its insanley awesome games on the 2 drive RAID 0 windows on another drive with my music swap file on another drive and misc on the last :). Only 2 are IDE. Buying 2 HDDs like I said and maybe getting smaller ones and possibly less overall space will give you a much more significant boost than buying one really fast drive in most cases. Long post yes but I hope it helps!

    Edit: Hard as I try I always spell something wrong :\

  3. System specs come first :)

    AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ (at stock speed to try and solve the problem, even tried underclocking it...)

    4x 512MB patriot 2-2-2-5 PC3200 running in dual channel

    Gigabyte K8N-SLI motherboard (BIOS revision: F5)

    2 aopen 6600GTs running in SLI

    2 200Gb seagate 7200RPM IDE HDDs

    1 200Gb Western Digital SATA HDD

    2 Western Digital HDDs in RAID 0 using the onboard RAID controller

    Antec AS600W PSU

    NEC 8x DVD-RW

    MSI DVD/CR-RW 48/32/48

    Running windows XP Pro SP-2 (all software/drivers yadda yadda is up to date)

    Dont think I missed anything there so here goes... I have the most bizar network related issue I've ever seen. In order to fully understand the effect this problem is having on my system you need to see a graph of pings to a specific IP. The software used has a trial version that I will provide a link for later, but the attacked file is the recorded graph from my machine to that IP and is a MUST see for understanding this problem.

    Bassicaly what happens is that I boot my machine the graph looks fine(check the beginning at a 5 minute scale) and then slowly and very noticably deteriorates from there. Take a look at different sections of the graph and you will see the Jttr go from .1 to sometimes as high as the hundreds. For about 30 minutes everything is fine and dandy and I can play all my games and do whatever I want on the internet just fine. After that CS:S starts behaving as if i have a 200ms ping(which it indeed looks like on the graph) with everything looking like its teleporting 2-3 feet at a time between the peak and trough of the the graph(i say that because it looks like a wave on the graph sometimes). Warcraft 3 shows 50-60 fps in game with fraps yet behaves like 2 with the same kind of teleport bug as CS. With the ping times supposedly reaching 0ms over 19 hops at times and reaching as high as 200ms on what normaly is about 80s with absolutley no other traffic happening is really bizar. Another game that may or maynot be being effected is EVE-Online, but not in the same way. Unlike CS and WC3 it doenst look like its laging or show any drop of framerate. It does however have a sound issue. This however has been reported by other players as well. The thing is I have tried all the known fixes to the common problem of having sound glitch out and none worked. One other thing I should mention is that I have rebuilt the TCP stack many times as well trying to fix the issue.

    I do not know if it is a directly caused windows issue, but I have all but ruled out it being a hardware problem. I have disabled the onboard LAN and stuck in a PCI card, absolutley no effect whatsoever. Ive tried messing with clockspeeds and one thing that did anything was slowing from 2Ghz to 1.8. All it did was make the problem take longer to become apparent on the graph though and didnt solve it. Ive checked my RAM and just about everything else including resetting the BIOS quite a few times and starting anew. Windows related I have checked and double checked logs settings and uninstalled/reinstalled/disabled any software that could effect how or what is going on network wise with my system and nothing works. System restore does nothing. Hours and hours of searching googled shows noone else with something even close to this kinda problem.

    And thus I come here. Hoping beyond hope you can help me fix this so I can play CS for more than 30 minutes uninterupted! That and maybe further my understanding of computers and the world of networking, but that ofcourse is second to games :). Thanx in advance guys!

    ps: for those of you who know me from the IRC channel: yes I have finnaly decided to get on the forums! :)

    http://pingplotter.com/download.html <-- Use the Pro version as it shows Jttr

    The file attached was run 24/7 for almost 2 days with and without heavy load as you will see in the graph itself. 1 second intervals and tracing/loging all hops the whole time. The beginning middle and end of the graph demonstrate what eventualy happens to my system.

    EDIT: Cant get the file upload system to work so I have taken screen shots; links below.

    http://xs.to/xs.php?f=No_problems_to_start...h=xs100&d=06203 <-- NO problems here at all 5 minute scale

    http://xs.to/xs.php?f=3_hour_view_problem_...h=xs100&d=06203 <-- Developing... 3 hour scale

    http://xs.to/xs.php?f=Big_problems.JPG&h=xs100&d=06203 <-- End result 5 minute scale