If one drive fails you lose all your data, but the other drive will still be working fine, you'd just have to reformat/partition it.
You can do whatever you want to the drives when they're not running. Removing the cable then reinserting it won't do anything to the RAID array.
Edit: Time...
It's been stated several times in this thread, so I don't know how you've missed it, but PCI-E and PCI are not compatible, so your card will not work in a PCI slot. Also a PCI-E x8 card does not physically fit into a PCI-E x1 slot, you'd have to file away part of the PCI-E x1 slot and hope it...
Yeah it's the 1.2 GHz dual core, I'm assuming it's an Intel IOP348 but it's never stated explicitly that I've seen. I went from 4x750 GB to 5x750 GB, which is what I've got now. The expansion process took 47-48 hours.
Would that be if one of the original drives failed? While I was trying to expand my 4 disk RAID 5 to a 6 disk RAID 6 my computer crashed, but the RAID 5 array was still working, but marked as degraded. I removed the two new drives and all the data seems to have survived intact.
Right now I'm...
From Anandtech:
"If it is not obvious by now, RAID 0 will provide outstanding results in synthetic benchmarks but really does nothing in actual applications. We should probably clarify that statement in detail. Utilizing the best performing drives in RAID 0 is the setup to have if you are...
There are two options, lets list their advantages over eachother:
Option 1 (single drive):
Less noise
Less heat
Less space used
Better reliability
Less complexity
Can be moved between all kinds of PCs and operating systems
Option 2 (RAID 0):
Slight performance increase
I think...
Two strong points for the single 1 TB drive:
1. You have about half the chance of losing all your data compared to the RAID 0.
2. You won't have to worry about weather or not you can transfer your RAID 0 array to a new motherboard, or temporarily transferring it to a different PC etc...
Yeah the numbers seem a bit high. Does your RAID controller use write-back cache huntrik? My single Seagate 7200.10 750 GB drive gets 145.4 MB/s using the same settings as you when I have write-back cache enabled, but only 91.8 MB/s with the cache disabled. This is on an Adaptec 5805 with 512...
The more expensive drive is a RAID edition drive, RE2 = RAID Edition 2. It has TLER officially supported (though it can be enabled shadily on the other drive as well), and I believe it has some other reliability/performance feature relevant to RAID/many-disk-systems which had something to do...
I don't mean to pester you on your choice not to go with RAID, but might I ask why you are choosing to use 5 mirror/backup drives instead of using RAID5 or 6? I'm just wondering if I am overlooking some advantage that setup might have over RAID.
Seagate calls it Error Recovery Control (ERC), and AFAIK they don't have it on any of their consumer drives, only the RAID/enterprise edition drives. Why should TLER/ERC be more important on WD drives than on Seagate drives? If it wasn't relevant to Seagate then Seagate wouldn't bother touting...
Why should he stay away from WD GP drives? You can enable TLER on them (which you can't do with any Seagate drives that I've heard of), making them a sort of poor man's RAID edition drives, and they are low noise/power. They are 5400 RPM, but will certainly have no problems at all with read...
Just moved my OS drive to the 5805 and all's working fine so far, though it did require a reactivation of Windows Vista.
I have tried filling the cache by transferring large files from several different drives onto my RAID5 (to see if I'll experience the problem you mentioned). The transfer...
You should be able to read the capacity of the HDD as a number of bytes (not GB). For instance my 150 GB Raptor X is registered as 139 "GB" (really GiB), but Windows also writes 150 037 590 016 bytes.
If I remember correctly the Linux kernel developers decided to switch to the correct...
Hi.
I own an Adaptec 5805 hardware RAID controller with 512 MB cache, and I am wondering if moving my system drive from the motherboard's integrated controller to the 5805 would increase performance by any meaningfull amount? I would guess that any write operation that fits in available cache...
Well it seems reasonable that the error recovery process is more likely to take too long when the drive is under heavy load, so under a light usage scenario it might not be very likely that there will be a problem (at least that's what I've read). Ofcourse that means that the likelyhood of...
All drives should be equally affected by the lack of TLER-like features. Any drive that spends too much time trying to fix an error will (from what I've understood) be dropped by the RAID controller.
Be aware that TLER is just Western Digital's name for this feature. Seagate calls it ERC...
I don't think those Seagate drives have TLER, and AFAIK there is no way to enable TLER on them either. (most?) Western Digital drives can have TLER activated by use of a DOS utility. See this thread for more information.
I don't actually know how often a drive will be dropped because of the...
Could you/anyone expand on that? I don't quite understand what is happening, but it sounds pretty serious. The drive somehow remembers that it usually gets a spin up signal, and for all time after having recieved a spin up signal just once, it won't ever spin ut without it ever again?
Also...
As has been said before a 8800GTX has no problems driving a 30" display at its native resolution. Even most 7800GTX cards have dual-link dvi, and can drive 30-inchers wonderfully. You only run into trouble when trying to play HDCP protected content. For that you would need HDCP support over...
Hey all. I'm in the market for a HD DVD/Blu-ray combo reader (the burners are way too expensive). At present the only thing available to me in the HD reader appartment is the Toshiba SD-H802A HD DVD reader, or the external xbox360 drive. So, do anyone know of any combo readers (preferably...
Ajax9000: Are you sure the monitor will accept 1280x720 (720p)? I thought it would only accept 2560x1600 or 1280x800, and that any other resoultion (including 1280x720) would have to be scaled by the graphics card. If I read your post right you're saying it will accept 4 resolutions: 2560x1600...
~El~Jefe~ is essentially correct about the 8800GTX/Ultra, though the wording is a bit off :p. The 8800 GTX and Ultra do indeed support dual-link DVI, and they do support HDCP, but they do not support HDCP over dual-link DVI. This is confirmed by The Official 100% HDCP ready video card list, or a...