![]() ![]() PCI \ VEN_8086 & DEV_1D02 & CC_0106.DeviceDesc = 'Intel (R) C600 Series Chipset SATA AHCI Controller " PCI \ VEN_8086 & DEV_1C03 & CC_0106.DeviceDesc = 'Intel (R) Mobile Express Chipset SATA AHCI Controller " PCI \ VEN_8086 & DEV_1C02 & CC_0106.DeviceDesc = 'Intel (R) Desktop / Workstation / Server Express Chipset SATA AHCI Controller " PCI \ VEN_8086 & DEV_3B22 & CC_0106.DeviceDesc = 'Intel (R) 5 Series / 3400 Series SATA AHCI Controller " PCI \ VEN_8086 & DEV_3B2F & CC_0106.DeviceDesc = 'Intel (R) 5 Series 6 Port SATA AHCI Controller " PCI \ VEN_8086 & DEV_3B29 & CC_0106.DeviceDesc = 'Intel (R) 5 Series 4 Port SATA AHCI Controller " these should support 8gen Intel chipsets too: SetupRST.exe -Noservice -NoIRSTGUI -Notray ![]() SATA AHCI drivers are installed as a barebone using: ![]() All of them (5 pcs) are upgraded with different SSD's inside (some of them are even using 2 or 3 SSD's at once: 2.5" SATA + another 2.5" SATA into DVD+/-RW caddy adapter + mSATA SSD as a third one) and this one I'm typing right now (Asus S550CA-CJ122H, Core i5-3337U, 2x 4GB DDR3L 1600MHz CL9 13.5V.) using SK Hynix 128GB SSD (model HFS128G32TND-N210A) as a boot drive boots the Win10 Pro 64bit Build 2004 in no more than 5 seconds after pressing the Power button on laptop using 12. Thanks in advance anyone who wishes to discuss this topic.Ĭan't remember what IRST SATA AHCI draivers I was using backthen when I was having Z87/C220 based motherboard (gotta look into my drivers archive) but still have a lot of Asus S56CA and S550CA laptops based on i3 and i5 Ivy Bridge-U CPUs and HM76/C216 chipset/southbridge and these love IRST 12. However, the fastest boot time happens with the "bare" MS Standard ACHI driver, so should I just keep this one? I really can't see any new functionalities on newer SATA drivers and the ones Windows Update gives me make boot slower, which for me looks like a downgrade? Or maybe they load more stuff and features to make things faster? This does get fixed if I use any program to manage APM in Windows so the clicking stops, but does not change the fact that I get that bug with those drivers. This does not happpen with Windows Update drivers or Microsoft Standard storage driver. I downloaded 2 he recommends for 4th gen and 5th gen Intel systems with these drivers the system boots faster than with the Windows Update drivers, but these 2 drivers seem to have a small bug: They make my secondary HDD park its head after 128 seconds and I can hear them parking, no matter what I configure, so any operation related to HDD storage will make it click because it powers up again. Then I downloaded a couple from Win-Raid where Fernando posted different SATA drivers and tests: I've tested this and happens without a shadow of a doubt. These 2 drivers make the boot slower, even on an SSD. If I use the ones Windows Update gives via device manager, I get some recent ones (right now, I have 2, one from 2019 and from 2020, called Intel R C220 series, this from hitting update device driver a couple of times). I've tried 5 SATA drivers and all of them are, well, different. Windows 10 (64-bit OS) - fully updated.This post may not be too relevant, but I like to get all of the performance I can from my PC and well, if I can also optimize the I/O, even better.However, although it lists the BIOS, it doesn't list the chipset at all, so am wondering if these utilities actually check on the chipset. I also tried the Intel® Driver & Support Assistant and this also states no updates required. I tired the Dell driver utility and it scanned and said everything is up to date. Wondering if anyone knows if the "Intel(R) 8 Series/C220 Series SMBus Controller - 8C22" is the chipset? I cannot seem to locate a post on Dell to clarify or not, and I can't seem to locate any other method to identify the chipset. The driver listed for this SMBus Controller is 10.1.1.38. The Dell driver page for my PC lists the most recent chipset version as 10.1.1.7. The only thing I can locate that might be the Chipset is something listed as: "Intel(R) 8 Series/C220 Series SMBus Controller - 8C22". However, I cannot locate an entry in Device Manager with the word "Chipset" to identify if it is up-to-date. I've got a Dell XPS8700 from 2013 and have had issues with a new GPU and the final attempt to resolve the issue is to identify if the chipset is up-to-date. ![]()
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