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CF AztecMonsters have landed

Udo.Keller

Well-known member
Some of us are eagerly waiting for Manabu Sakai's CF AztecMonster, a CF to 3.5" SCSI adapter. Well, after waiting several months for his shipment taking place and some kind of an adventure tour through customs I'm happy to report that I hold them in my hands actually.

To start with, here's the accompanying manual: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/20111012093742.pdf

Here's a photo Manabu has sent me in spring: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/CF%20AM%20r1.1%201.jpeg

And here's a photo I've shot using my iPhone, sorry for the picture quality. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/IMG_0159.jpg

 

JDW

Well-known member
Some questions...

• What Mac did you put it in?

• I assume it did not come with the screws, nuts or mounting bracket shown in the PDF manual, so how did you mount it in your Mac?

• What specific CF card did you use with it?

• What is performance like relative to a fast spinning platter hard drive? (Boot times, launching of apps, file duplicate, Benchmark utils, etc.)

 

Udo.Keller

Well-known member
• I assume it did not come with the screws, nuts or mounting bracket shown in the PDF manual, so how did you mount it in your Mac?
More details on mounting:

• Screws and cubic nuts actually are included, together with some jumpers: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/IMG_0161.jpg

• Tho holes in the PCB seem to match exactly with those of a standard 3.5" disk drive: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/IMG_0163.jpg Thus, using vertical mounting screws is no problem at all. In order to use horizontal mounting screws, one has to use the cubic nuts that are included, as shown in figure 6 of his manual.

Some questions...
• What Mac did you put it in?

• What specific CF card did you use with it?

• What is performance like relative to a fast spinning platter hard drive? (Boot times, launching of apps, file duplicate, Benchmark utils, etc.)
I intend to put them in my SE/30 and Quadra 700 next weekend and will report some performance numbers asap.

 

TheNixer

Well-known member
I'd love to see how well this works in your SE/30. Am I understanding his website correctly? He's developed a new PS and analog board as well for the SE/30? Is the CF AztecMonster an extremely limited run?

 

tt

Well-known member
What program would be best for performing and reporting HD benchmarks?

 

JDW

Well-known member
Two more questions and a consideration...

• The manual mentions an AKAI Sampler, which apparently speaks of an onboard, active terminator. The question here is what does Manabu Sakai mean when he says you may need to disable the active terminator and use an external one? His manual status that his product may act strangely, but no specifics are given about what "strangely" means. Further, he says the cause of that "strangeness" would be some older SCSI chips (i.e., those that are not 100% compatible with the active termination in Manabu's product). But does anyone here know of old SCSI interface chips not working well with active terminators, forcing the use of external passive terminators? I am quite curious about this point.

• Continuing thoughts about performance, so long as the CF card is 128GB or smaller, the manual says it should work (as long as you partition it properly for the OS you intend to use). But can this product take advantage of all the speed boosting features of newer CF cards? And will there be a noticeable difference in performance between super fast cards like a SanDisk Extreme III and an older card with no speed boost features, when used in an SE/30 which has a rather slow implementation of SCSI to begin with?

• Perhaps one of the biggest considerations before buying these CF card solutions is endurance and lifespan. From what I see, there is no dedicated chip onboard this thing to endure data is written to different parts of the CF card constantly. As such, the CF card would go bad "in spots" much faster than any dedicated SSD like these:

http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other+World+Computing/SSDMLP040/

As to TT's question, I most often use Norton Utilities' System Info for benchmarking my old Macs.

 

JDW

Well-known member
Indeed, SanDisk mentions "wear leveling" on some of their high end cards like this one:

http://sandisk.com/microsites/compactflash/index.html

But I must assume such wear leveling is geared for video and photographic cameras, rather than computers. I don't have proof though. Furthermore, if it can be proved (and I hope someone among us can do that), then it could be said that there is no real advantage to paying OWC for their dedicated SSDs versus a CF card + AztecMonster Hardware (especially since OWC's SSDs are IDE, not SCSI).

I've actually been considering the purchase of an OWC SSD for use in an older PowerBook Wallstreet PDQ I picked up on EBAY recently. The computer cost me $15. But the OWC SSD, even in the smallest 40GB size, costs $140 plus shipping.

For me, if the performance and longevity is the same, and if I can get the drive to work in the vintage Mac of my choice (SCSI or IDE, 3.5" or 2.5" inch drive bay), then the final decision boils down to price alone.

 

techknight

Well-known member
if only one would copy the contents out of that flash IC, this guy could be copied....

Edit: Nevermind, the ARC760 is ACards proprietary SCSI-IDE Bridge IC. of course, in limited production/if at all. maybe hes getting them from a broker in china? no idea.

 

Udo.Keller

Well-known member
• Continuing thoughts about performance, so long as the CF card is 128GB or smaller, the manual says it should work (as long as you partition it properly for the OS you intend to use). But can this product take advantage of all the speed boosting features of newer CF cards?
Good question. I have asked Manabu Sakai exactly the same, and in July he wrote to me: "AztecMonster and PowerMonster II are both available for newer CF PIO-6 UltraDMA 2".

According to a SanDisk information, PIO-6 means 25MB/s and UDMA-2 means 33.3MB/s. Both are far below the leading edge of e.g. SanDisk Extreme 60MB/s or SanDisk Extreme Pro 90MB/s.

For me, that's not a problem. The Macintosh SCSI bus performance will be the limiting factor anyway. I don't see CF as a performance feature, but mainly as a noise reduction feature. In addition, I hope it will help making backup copies easier in the future.

Again, I will report some performance numbers as soon as possible.

 

JDW

Well-known member
...PIO-6 means 25MB/s and UDMA-2 means 33.3MB/s. Both are far below the leading edge of e.g. SanDisk Extreme 60MB/s or SanDisk Extreme Pro 90MB/s... I will report some performance numbers as soon as possible.
If possible, a performance number test with "the leading edge" Extreme Pro 90MB/s please! :b&w:

 

zuiko21

Well-known member
I believe the only performance increase would be the zero seek time of the CF -- the SE/30's SCSI bus throughput would be already maxed by a 'decent' (say, mid-90s) HDD.

Not that it isn't important, though... especially in a complex system like Mac OS, heavily dependant on frequent disk accesses in order to load resources, etc.

 

Udo.Keller

Well-known member
...PIO-6 means 25MB/s and UDMA-2 means 33.3MB/s. Both are far below the leading edge of e.g. SanDisk Extreme 60MB/s or SanDisk Extreme Pro 90MB/s... I will report some performance numbers as soon as possible.
If possible, a performance number test with "the leading edge" Extreme Pro 90MB/s please! :b&w:
So here are the very first numbers.

• I took a standard CF card, a Transcend 4GB 133x http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/51A3lnhtUrL._SL500_AA300_.jpg and put it together with the AztecMonster into an external SCSI enclosure, the AztecMonster's internal active terminator is disabled in my setup.

• Connected it to my Quadra 800 running 7.1.1, fired up FWB HD Toolkit v2.5.3. HDT detected the new disk and I did an "Auto Initialize w/ Format Type: Quick".

• Here are the HDT benchmark numbers using the default settings: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/DSCN1936.JPG

• At the lower screen edge, in the background window you can see the disk (ID2) containing two volumes.

More details to follow tomorrow.

 

JDW

Well-known member
Thanks for posting the performance chart, but what is the frame of reference (i.e., the comparison with a normal, spinning-platter drive in the same computer)?

And, regardless of what the benchmark charts say, how fast does it FEEL to you?

Also, from what I looked up on that Transcend 133x card, it transfers between 15MB/s to 40MB/s, with 40MB/s being absolute max. And although that is theoretically faster than what your machine is capable of (and much faster than the rates shown in your benchmark graph), it would still be a worthwhile comparison to stick an even faster CF card in there and see how it performs, both for the benchmark and for the "FEEL" test. Ditto for a significantly slower card as well.

Theory doesn't always match the experimental, especially in cases where the theory was flawed in the first place because we overlooked something (which in this case could affect performance).

 

Udo.Keller

Well-known member
Thanks for posting the performance chart, but what is the frame of reference (i.e., the comparison with a normal, spinning-platter drive in the same computer)?
You are absolutely right, here is some reference data done with the same computer, the same cabling, the same external enclosure - but

• this time with a Quantum Fireball 1280S instead: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/DSCN1938.JPG

• same as above, this time with the Fireball internal write cache disabled: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/DSCN1950.JPG

• same as above, this time with the Fireball internal read cache disabled, write cache disabled: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2545101/DSCN1952.JPG

 

Udo.Keller

Well-known member
And, regardless of what the benchmark charts say, how fast does it FEEL to you?
Despite the performance numbers, it feels faster. In fact, it does not only feel faster, it IS faster.

• System boot time, measured from chime to desktop with all volume icons mounted, when started from the Fireball disk, is about 53s.

• I copied the whole system drive to the CF card, with all extensions, control panels, everything, changed the startup volume to the CF volume. Startup time is about 38s now.

 

JDW

Well-known member
Thank you for the comparison between the AZTEC Monster and a normal spinning-platter hard drive. The only thing left to test at this point would be another CF card, in order to determine if the specific features of the CF cards would impact performance further. For example, if you tested a significantly faster CF card, and if the benchmarks did not change much at all and if you could not "FEEL" any difference in speed among the cards, then such would prove that the AZTEC Monster hardware is incapable of taking advantage of the CF card features that otherwise would boost READ/WRITE performance when used in hardware specifically designed to use those features.

 

tt

Well-known member
So it looks like the main advantage of the AztecMonster is the faster access and seek times which appears to enhance boot times slightly. How about timing something like copying a large file to the drives?

I don't understand what the bottleneck is for sustained reads and writes. The specs of the CF card are much higher than what the real hard disk is reporting. Is it the lack of cache?

For a system such as an SE/30, would the slower SCSI bus narrow the performance gap?

http://support.apple.com/kb/TA29470?viewlocale=en_US

 

theos911

Well-known member
I wouldn't call a 35% increase "slightly faster". ::)

The main issue is the bus and overhead. An SE/30 or a Quadra wouldn't be able to get full speeds even if it had RAM Disk on the other end.

 
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