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Short for Ultra-DMA
and also known as Ultra ATA, UDMA
is a standard developed by Quantum
in conjunction with Intel that
is twice as fast as the previous DMA interface. UDMA was first
introduced in 1998 with
the ATA-4 or ATA/ATAPI-4 standard and is capable of transferring data at 33.3 MBps,
which is how the UDMA/33 or Ultra-DMA/33 names came about. Since
its initial release and the approval of new ATA standards, the below
UDMA standards are available.
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ATA-5 -- UDMA/66,
Ultra-DMA/66
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ATA-6 -- UDMA/100,
Ultra-DMA/100
Notice:
UDMA/66 and higher are only supported when an 80-wire 40-pin
cable is being used. This cable can be distinguished by looking at
the ribbon and noticing the amount of wires when compared with a
40-wire cable.
Also see: ATA, DMA, Hard disk drive
definitions
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