Categories: Hardware

How to recover the original speed of a SATA or M.2 SSD

In the first place and if we do not have or remember the parameters of our SSD, it is convenient for us to go to the manufacturer's website to look at its specifications and in the way to a review where it shows us the real performance of the unit, in order to compare data.

We start from the basis and premise that we know this data, so the first step will be to check the current performance of our disk by measuring the speed of the SSD.

ATTO Disk Benchmark enters the scene

Ideally, download a benchmark as complete as ATTO, which will tell us the read and write performance of our SSD in a range of files and sizes more than interesting. The benchmark does not require anything more than pressing start and starting to measure said performance, so finally and once finished, the data it will show us will be something similar to this:

The speeds will logically vary between the different models, but in our case there is a drop in performance at some point in the writing, while the reading remains firm. This is because we have the SSD almost full, which lowers the performance in this section.

Similarly, it is a very normal behavior in SSDs that need to be deleted and restored to their initial point.

Save the data that is in the SSD

The process that we are going to carry out implies a total erasure of the disk, so the ideal is that we keep everything necessary in another hard disk before starting. After deletion, many files may not be accessible from any recovery software, so be sure what is saved and what is not.

Deleting and restoring the SSD

Although each brand offers a different software to do this process, we are going to do it from a more personal and equally effective section, since for example, if we want to recover the performance of the main unit of the operating system, no software option existing will allow you to do it while we remain in Windows.

Therefore, we must enter the UEFI of our motherboard and go to the secure erase utility for SSDs. This option will vary depending on the motherboard model and perhaps the UEFI model we have, but normally today they all include it as standard.

Recover the speed of your SSD

In our case we will use a ASUS X570-F Gaming.

Miners Hashrate

Recent Posts

Mining RTX 3070 at NiceHash: Overclocking, tuning, profitability, consumption

Mining on RTX 3070. Overclocking, tuning, profitability, consumption: If you are interested in finding more…

6 months ago

Mining GTX 1660, 1660 Ti, 1660 Super: Overclocking, settings, consumption

Mining with GTX 1660, 1660 Ti, 1660 Super. Overclocking, settings, consumption, profitability, comparisons - If…

6 months ago

Mining RTX 2070 and 2070 Super: Overclocking, profitability, consumption

Mining with RTX 2070 and 2070 Super. Overclocking, profitability, consumption, comparison What the RTX 2070…

6 months ago

Mining with RTX 3060, 3060 Ti. Limitations, overclocking, settings, consumption

Mining with RTX 3060, 3060 Ti. Limitations, overclocking, settings, consumption, profitability, comparison Let's look at…

6 months ago

Alphacool Eisblock Aurora Acryl GPX-A Sapphire – test: 2.8 GHz++ are not an issue

Alphacool Eisblock Aurora Acryl GPX-A (2022) with Sapphire Radeon RX 6950 XT Nitro+ Pure in…

6 months ago

Corporate Crypto Strategies 4.0: Leading with Bitcoin Expertise

In the ever-evolving landscape of business strategy, Bitcoin has emerged as a pivotal asset. With…

6 months ago

This website uses cookies.


Notice: ob_end_flush(): failed to send buffer of zlib output compression (1) in /home/gamefeve/bitcoinminershashrate.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 5420

Notice: ob_end_flush(): failed to send buffer of zlib output compression (1) in /home/gamefeve/bitcoinminershashrate.com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 5420