On Jul 19, 2005, at 7:37 PM, José Pedro Saraiva wrote:

Thanks for the reply Colin =)


If you remember your stripe size, then you should be able to plug
your drives into any ICH5R-based motherboard and get your data back.
Theoretically, you could plug your drives into any RAID whose BIOS
does not write to the disks when creating an array and then recreate
the array in the BIOS with the same stripe size.  I don't know if
software RAID can rebuild your array, but that seems like your best
bet, lest you have a friend with a lot of SATA RAID controllers (s)
he's willing to lend out.


I already ordered another ICH5R motherboard (similar to my P4P800 but
a new model, since my old one is not available anymore) to try that
out. I'm almost sure that my stripe size is 64KB (default). If so,
plugging my hard drives into the new board and creating a new array
with the same stripe size will give me access to my data? Or is there
the risk of loosing it all? Do you know if the ICH5R writes to the
disks when creating the array?

No idea. Google for some technical documents or fire off an email to Asus, Intel or your RAID controller's manufacturer.

Recreating an array could be risky. SCSI drives usually have a write- protect jumper, but AFAIK, there's no way to implement that with SATA. You could try pulling the data or power cable after configuring the array but before building it. SATA should be hot- swappable if you're using the SATA power plug, so there probably won't be any damage to your disk or motherboard. Hopefully that will write to the RAID BIOS but not the disk. I wouldn't recommend doing this, though, but hey, you're not me. :-)
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Colin
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