To carry disk performance to the max, go with
a striped SCSI array of 15000 RPM drives!
Very expensive, though. Also, one thing tends to lead to another: If you
use 15000 RPM drives, you soon have to start worrying about keeping the
whole machine from melting down in its own heat.
I'm
Trying to figure out whether any
increased performance would be worth the loss of data if one
of the drives goes. On my current system I use the second
disk for daily incremental back-ups (without full mirroring)
which would be useless with the level 0 RAID. How, also,
does RAID interact with
On Saturday, May 11, 2002 7:07 PM, John Matturri
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
and 2 80MB 7200 drives
RAID-0 (which is supported on the motherboard
Just a comment: With the popular on-board HPT RAID-chipsets, Seagate
Baracuda IV drives in RAID-0 will result in *lousy* throughput, 1/2 -
1/4 the
12:07 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [filmscanners] Re: Re:Computer size: RAID
To carry disk performance to the max, go with
a striped SCSI array of 15000 RPM drives!
Very expensive, though. Also, one thing tends to lead to
another: If you
use 15000 RPM drives, you soon have
Of John Matturri
Sent: Saturday, May 11, 2002 12:07 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [filmscanners] Re: Re:Computer size: RAID
To carry disk performance to the max, go with
a striped SCSI array of 15000 RPM drives!
Very expensive, though. Also, one thing tends to lead to another: If
you use
PROTECTED]
Subject: [filmscanners] RE: Re:Computer size: RAID
I'm getting a system with 1.5 GB of RAM and 2 80MB 7200
drives (CPU: Athlon 1800+). Aside from possible
video-editing, would there be a reason to set the drives up
as RAID-0 (which is supported on the motherboard I'm using
so doesn't
: [filmscanners] Re: Re:Computer size: RAID
To carry disk performance to the max, go with
a striped SCSI array of 15000 RPM drives!
Very expensive, though. Also, one thing tends to lead to another: If you
use 15000 RPM drives, you soon have to start worrying about keeping the
whole machine
[This is a bit off-topic / harddisk-technical]
I wrote:
[...] HPT RAID-chipsets [+] Seagate Baracuda IV [...] *lousy*
throughput
On Saturday, May 11, 2002 10:02 PM, Austin Franklin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you have this system, have you corresponded with HPT or the
manufacturer about this
]
Subject: [filmscanners] RE: Re:Computer size: RAID
I am running three IDE drives striped using Windows 2000 striping and I get
close to triple transfer speed.
If you want to read drive reviews look at these two sites:
http://www.storagereview.com
http://www.tomshardware.com
The perfromance