Description
Compatible with PC and Mac.
RunCore Pro IV 1.8" Female PATA SSD incorporates
advanced flash controller and NAND flash memory
technology to deliver a state-of-the-art, non-volatile mass
storage device. It supports capacity from 16GB to 128GB.
1.8" IDE SSD contains the cache size of up to 64MB with
maximum transfer rate as high as 80MB/s. Furthermore,
it's characteristics of low power consumption and
anti-vibration are obvious.
RunCore Pro IV 1.8" PATA IDE SSD as standard PATA
driver, which supports all major operating systems such as
Windows 9X/Me/NT/XP/CE/Vista/Windows7, MAC,
Linux and Unix, Solaris, Vxworks. Therefore, it is an ideal
storage device for commercial users' mobile PC.
Easy 3 Step Do-It-Yourself Upgrade
All RunCore Pro V SSDs offer upgrading made easy with our
simple 3 Step Do-It-Yourself upgrade package, which gives
you all the tools you need and simplifies the process so
that even a novice computer user can easily complete it.
- Plug the RunCore SSD drive into an available USB port.
- Run the included cloning software.
- Install the SSD and enjoy.
It's that easy!
The upgrade package includes a High Speed USB 2.0 HDD case
and cables to clone your existing drive and turn it into an
external USB drive, a 15 Day Free Trial of Acronis Migrate
Easy for PC and Carbon Copy Cloner for Mac, and screwdriver.
Typical Applications
- SONY series laptop
- TOSHIBA series laptop
Advance Wear-Leveling Algorithm
The NAND flash devices are limited by a certain number of write cycles. When using a file
system, frequent file table updates is mandatory. If some area on the flash wears out
faster than others, it would significantly reduce the lifetime of the whole device, even if the
erase counts of others are far from the write cycle limit. Thus, if the write cycles can be
distributed evenly across the media, the lifetime of the media can be prolonged
significantly. The scheme is achieved both via buffer management and specific advanced
wear leveling to ensure that the lifetime of the flash media can be increased, and the disk
access performance is optimized as well.
S.M.A.R.T Function
S.M.A.R.T. is an acronym for Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology, an
open standard allowing disk drives to automatically monitor their own health and report
potential problems. It protects the user from unscheduled downtime by monitoring and
storing critical drive performance and calibration parameters. Ideally, this should allow
taking proactive actions to prevent impending drive failure. SMART feature adopts the
standard SMART command B0h to read data from the drive. When the SMART Utility
running on the host, it analyzes and reports the disk status to the host before the device is
in critical condition.
Built-in Hardware ECC
The ATA-Disk Module uses BCH Error Detection Code (EDC) and Error Correction Code
(ECC) algorithms which correct up to eight random single-bit errors for each 512-byte
block of data. High performance is fulfilled through hardware-based error detection and
correction.
Coming soon. Check back soon for a full review.