Posted 25 December 2002 - 09:47 AM
While that is true, it only affects add-on SATA cards, not the channels integrated into the motherboard, which are universally connected directly to the chipset. This limitation of IDE controllers using the PCI bus was recognized a few years ago and corrected. Thus the proliferation of new NB-SB connection schemes, a'la V-Link. The PCI bus was moved from the northbridge to the southbridge, and thus the ATA controllers no longer have to share PCI bus bandwidth.
Your complaint though hits RAID controllers hard. I haven't asked 3ware whether the new cards (native Serial ATA controllers early next year, supporting online capacity expansion!) will be 64/66 or will be 64/33 like the current crop. I imagine they will transition to the faster bus, as 16 SATA channels can blast past 64/33 PCI without even breathing hard. Then of course the problem becomes finding motherboards supporting the faster PCI buses. Asking for faster PCI buses is one sure way to kick yourself out of the enthusiast market and into the workstation/server market, where $400+ motherboards aren't uncommon.