Anyone else here have any of the Gigabyte boards? All I see everyone mentioning are the Asus boards.
I do (see sig) because I needed display port out. But that is a P67 board and it may not even be affected.
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Anyone else here have any of the Gigabyte boards? All I see everyone mentioning are the Asus boards.
to my understanding it was decreased performance after heavy use or worse case is the port not longer works from what i read not that it did any data corruption or damaged the hddIf I use a HDD on sata II port can the HDD or the data on it be damaged?
+1to my understanding it was decreased performance after heavy use or worse case is the port not longer works from what i read not that it did any data corruption or damaged the hdd
to my understanding it was decreased performance after heavy use or worse case is the port not longer works from what i read not that it did any data corruption or damaged the hdd
Stupid question but I plugged my Sata II hdd into the Sata III connection but when I boot it doesnt show up in the bios? I thought they were compatible?
They should be, you may need to load a driver for the controller.
I should have explained better - I'm connecting it to the Sata III connection on the mobo... would I need to update the bios in that case? (Assuming there's even an update available yet)
chances are its a driver issue, it could be a bios issue, check ur manufacturers website for any bios updates, if not check the install DVD that came with your board for drivers
chances are its a driver issue, it could be a bios issue, check ur manufacturers website for any bios updates, if not check the install DVD that came with your board for drivers
Kinda makes me happy I'm on "computer savings time".![]()
Wow I see so many people saying/hoping this does not affect them. Cougar Point is *all* 6 series chipsets. This problem affects every motherboard that has socket 1155 on it. It also covers *all* laptops that have Sandy Bridge CPU's. Cougar Point is the only chipset that is even available for Sandy Bridge motherboards and laptops. Either get a couple sata controller pcie cards or get the motherboard replaced. Those are your options.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-20030070-64.html
Wow I see so many people saying/hoping this does not affect them. Cougar Point is *all* 6 series chipsets. This problem affects every motherboard that has socket 1155 on it. It also covers *all* laptops that have Sandy Bridge CPU's. Cougar Point is the only chipset that is even available for Sandy Bridge motherboards and laptops. Either get a couple sata controller pcie cards or get the motherboard replaced. Those are your options.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-20030070-64.html
The problem in the chipset was traced back to a transistor in the 3Gbps PLL clocking tree. The aforementioned transistor has a very thin gate oxide, which allows you to turn it on with a very low voltage. Unfortunately in this case Intel biased the transistor with too high of a voltage, resulting in higher than expected leakage current. Depending on the physical characteristics of the transistor the leakage current here can increase over time which can ultimately result in this failure on the 3Gbps ports. The fact that the 3Gbps and 6Gbps circuits have their own independent clocking trees is what ensures that this problem is limited to only ports 2 - 5 off the controller.
You can coax the problem out earlier by testing the PCH at increased voltage and temperature levels. By increasing one or both of these values you can simulate load over time and that’s how the problem was initially discovered. Intel believes that any current issues users have with SATA performance/compatibility/reliability are likely unrelated to the hardware bug.
Is there any chance that this issue would affect any of the X58 boards?
This is just infecting the chipset and not the 2600K or 2500K CPU's right? I've read in here that even CPU's are infected? It's strictly just the chipset on the motherboards right?
Curious what happends with the Intel Branded boards I have. The mini ITX H67CF and the Micro ATX Intel branded board... This sucks.
Newegg has taken down all 1155 motherboards and processors.
I think everybody with a SB board should RMA it no matter what, it would be stupid not to. Even if you don't use the faulty ports, you might give or resell your board or computer later to someone who will, or the faulty transistor might just burn at any time. If you haven't taken advantage of the RMA while Intel offers it to OEMs and board manufacturers, chances are you won't be allowed to return it then.Still, maybe in time if MSI offers to cross-ship I'll take advantage of an RMA; however, right now I'm not very worried about it. Anyone else feel the same?
A driver issue wouldn't affect what the BIOS "sees".
I would think the motherboard makers will just send out cheap PCI/PCIe based SATA controllers. It's the cheapest and easiest solution for them.
This is pretty unfortunate -- luckily for me I only use SATA III ports 1/2 for HDDs and relegate the rarely used DVDRW to a SATA II port. (a lot cheaper to replace than a harddrive thankfully)
Still, maybe in time if MSI offers to cross-ship I'll take advantage of an RMA; however, right now I'm not very worried about it. Anyone else feel the same?