Originally Posted by
DaftpuNk
From experience I can say that the only SATA drives which are faster than PATA (standard drives are not referred to as IDE, as it means integrated drive electronics which both PATA and SATA are) are the 10,000 rpm Western Digital Raptors.
What is your optical drive arrangement? As we all know, having an optical device on the same channel slows that channel down to the speed of the slowest device, however I seem to recall this only being true of when the slower drive is in operation.
Therefore, if you connect a new PATA hard disk to the secondary channel as a master, and put your optical drive on as the slave, it should work fine. Of course, any optical drive operations at the same time as transferring data would slow things down.
You *could* also use a PATA drive on the SATA controller using Abit's Serillel adapter if you have the NF7-S, or use a SATA hard disk on the controller and not affect the PATA channels if you want to. However this is no benefit to this, as mentioned above the SATA drives do not feel faster at all unless it's a raptor. Also, definitely keep the OS drive on PATA.
If boot-up times are important to you, stick with PATA as the SATA RAID BIOS takes a few extra seconds to detect drives and allow the system to boot. This can be reduced by having the latest BIOS version of course.
Hope this helps!