Reply 12380 of 29597, by creepingnet
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wrote:Is there a 4GB SSD somewhere? I would like to install one in my Packard Bell 486 over the CF adapter I have as it's a bit sluggish at times.
I don't know if they go that low, the smallest I've seen is 16GB Gumstick drives used by Dell for their Optane technology (but they are basically just a regular SSD). Typically for that size I'd go with an IDE Drive-On-Module.
I use these insanely huge hard disks because I like seeing just how close to a "daily driver" I can push these old 486 systems. As of late it seems the booming interest in retro-computing on the PC archetecture is really boosting things beyond a point that I ever saw in the 2000's when I felt like I was maybe one of the five people on the planet pushing x86 IBM Compatibles this far. But putting a modern 6.0 GB/s SSD is the biggest hard disk device, let alone the newest device I've ever heard about let alone seen tethered to an 80486 based PC. Before then I thought 80GB 5400 RPM IDE was the ceiling. Right now I'm testing out Retro-Zilla on it (looks like Toasty Tech updated his site with Retrozilla and I'm quite digging it).
The speed increase is there with SSD though - what it improves is the latency when the disk reads/writes and improves multiplexed read operations to hard hit the edge of the bottleneck for a lack of better words - rather than waiting for head X to move to sector Y, it just spits out the data to the bridge and host adapter immediatley. This is really noticeable when installing software or running games that have to read large chunks of data from the disk.
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