| |
| | |
| Join The Cult | Tweakers | Image Gallery | Donate | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read | |
Welcome to Tweak3DThis is an open forum about tech stuff, games, and cars. Sign-up here to join the discussion. |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| | RAID0 question | permalink #1 |
| Tweak Minion | If I wanted to create 2 raid0 arrays, would i need to purchase 2 raid controller cards? the card: Newegg.com - Rosewill RC-200 PCI IDE (ATA) Silicon Image RAID (0/1/0+1/JBOD) Host Controller Card - Controllers / RAID Cards A single card has 2 IDE inputs and I'm assuming the only way to get RAID0 to work would be to have each drive in the array plugged directly into each input on the controller card, as opposed to plugging in 2 drives to 1 IDE cable. | |
| | ||
| | | |
| | #2 |
| | |
| | |
| | permalink #2 | |
| Vagina Friendly Mayor | Yeah - if the card only accepts two devices then you'd need two cards for IDE devices. Edit: damn at $10 I may get one for my parent's old PC | |
| Perfect. Fuck. Ok stay here and get... butt fucked by 12 Neanderthals. Bitch | ||
| | | |
| | permalink #3 | |
| From Utah, NOT mormon | Why would you want 2 raid 0's? That's 4 hard disks where if any of them fails, you just lost half your data from 1 set of raid. Personally I see no point in raid 0 unless you need absolutely the best performance you can get, but it's still not a big enough gain for the possibility of losing everything with 1 drive failure. *edit* Hard drive failures don't happen to everyone, but for every HD you add to an array, you increase your chances of having one fail. | |
| "We both got fucked over on that part and not in the rememberable go brag to your friends way, no, no, this is the you cry tears and try to pretend you are someplace else sodomy type." -Joe "Women are odd like that... one day they confess to love you, the next day you wake up to a beep beep beep sound of a garbage truck backing up and picking up the garbage can she put you in." - Joe | ||
| | | |
| | permalink #4 | ||
| From Utah, NOT mormon | Directly from wikipedia: Quote:
| ||
| | | ||
| | permalink #5 | |
| Tweak Minion | this will be my work powerhouse box: Multimedia creation, file storage, design, encoding, torrents downloading, etc. I have 2 40gb ide's and 1 80 gb ide. I have 2 p4 systems from my dad's office waiting for me to do something with them. My plan is this: -2 40 gb's -raid0 for windowsXP only - backed up to my internal removable storage via driveImageXML or equivelent (uses shadow copy, so you don't need to reboot or anything) -purchase another 80 gig ide and put that on another raid0 for an application partition (change c -purchase one of those new sata2 Terrabyte drives w/ the 32MB cache + 2 5.25 SATA hotswap bays - enables me to xfer huge amounts of files from computer to computer and I can also pull out my backup drive at any time I want to bring anywhere I want. Alls I need is a SATA to USB adapter, and I can pull my drive out and bring it to a friends house for file xfer goodness. -migrate all archives and storage of my large groups of files from all the computers in my appartment to the TB drive, zipping/compressing old data, burning data more than 2 years old to Dual Layer DVD's, etc... -run synergy on it so I can use my main keyboard and mouse for both my main computer/gaming rig and my powerhouse box. I can also have the computer + monitor right next to my main rig. -take pictures when this is done edit: regarding the reliability of raid0 - I don't really care about that too much: 1.) i'll be running backups on both arrays to my 3g/sec SATA removable backup drive, and the IDE drives are so cheap anyways, that all I'll have to do is replace the drive-format array-re-image. I also plan on running a few virtual machines on this work powerhouse for prototyping and sandboxing. Last edited by Undertaker989; 07-13-2008 at 11:01 PM. | |
| | | |
| | permalink #6 | |
| From Utah, NOT mormon | Okily dokily, it's your time/money You will need 2 of those raid controllers. If you had both drives on the same cable, you wouldn't be getting any performance increase at all. | |
| | | |
| | permalink #7 | |
| Globe Trekker | My old Promise TX-2000 would support 4 drives, but it was almost 100 bucks too. But in my mind you get what you pay for. RAID isn't something I'd be willing to go cheap on. | |
| ||
| | | |
| | permalink #8 | |
| Tweak Minion | from the reviews, the rosewill card is stable enough. I'm not going to be using new drives on it anyway. I mostly need the drives/controller to last about 8 months or so until I build a new gaming system. After that, I'll upgrade my current PC to sata2 raid0 similar setup as mentioned above, w/ all critical/important data + partition on the backup drive. | |
| | | |
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| New TV Question | Scrubbin_Bubbles | Off-Topic | 26 | 11-10-2007 03:19 PM |
| Question | cured | Tech | 8 | 10-15-2007 04:53 AM |
| Question? | ivanolo | The Tweak Market | 3 | 07-31-2007 03:37 AM |
| question | Miller | Off-Topic | 5 | 07-06-2006 05:17 AM |
| dual raid0 array. that's right. | gbates31 | Tech | 1 | 03-14-2006 12:51 AM |