External SATA is an industry standard for controlling the various hardware used to connect external storage devices. It competes with some Firewire and USB standards to provide faster data transfer speeds between hardware devices.
How Does eSATA Compare With USB and FireWire?
Both USB and FireWire interfaces are high-speed serial interfaces between a computer system and external peripherals. USB is more general and used for a wider range of peripherals such as keyboards, mice, scanners, and printers. FireWire is almost exclusively used as an external storage interface. Even though these interfaces are used for external storage, the drives used in these devices use the SATA interface. The external enclosure that houses the hard drive or optical drive uses a bridge that converts signals from the USB or FireWire interface into the SATA interface required by the drive. This translation leads to some degradation in the overall performance of the drive. One advantage that both of these interfaces implemented was the hot-swappable ability. Previous generations of storage interfaces typically did not support the ability to have drives dynamically added or removed from a system. This feature is what made the external storage market explode. Another interesting feature that can be found with eSATA is the port multiplier. This allows a single eSATA connector to be used to connect an external eSATA chassis that provides multiple drives in an array. This can provide expandable storage in a single chassis and the ability to develop redundant storage via a RAID array.
eSATA vs. SATA
External Serial ATA is a subset of the additional specifications for the Serial ATA interface standard. It is not a required function, but an extension that can be added to both controller and devices. For eSATA to function properly, both connected devices must support the necessary SATA features. Many early generation SATA controllers and drives do not support the Hot Plug capability that is critical for the function of the external interface. Even though eSATA is part of the SATA interface specifications, it uses a different physical connector from the internal SATA connectors to better shield the high-speed serial lines transferring the signals against EMI interference. It also provides a 2-meter overall cable length compared to the 1 meter for internal cables. As a result, the two cables aren’t interchangeable.
Are There Speed Differences Between eSATA and SATA?
One of the key advantages that eSATA offers over USB and FireWire is speed. While the other two incur overhead from converting the signal between the external interface and the internal based drives, SATA does not have this problem. Because SATA is the standard interface used on many new hard drives, a simple converter between the internal and external connectors is required in the housing. Thus, the external device should run at the same speed as an internal SATA drive. The various interfaces each have a theoretical maximum transfer speed:
USB 1.1: 15 MbpsFireWire (1394a): 400 MbpsUSB 2.0: 480 MbpsFireWire 800 (1394b): 800 MbpsSATA 1.5: 1.5 GbpsSATA 3.0: 3.0 GbpsUSB 3.0: 4.8 GbpsUSB 3.1: 10 Gbps
The newer USB standards are faster in theory than the SATA interface that the drives in the external enclosures use. Because of the overhead of converting the signals, the newer USB still proves slightly slower. However, for most consumers, there is almost no difference. Accordingly, eSATA connectors are less common now, given that USB-based enclosures are more convenient.