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werner said:
mic_y said:another major disadvantage of RAID... u cant just remove ur HDD, take it to ur friends, and copy stuff onto it![]()
/me put flame resistant cap onJames said:RAID 0 Stripping for home use doesn't have to many positives though I am afraid
andres101 said:/me put flame resistant cap on
It actually does! the biggest bottleneck on most PC's nowadays is the hdd. striping gives a nice performance boost. especially so if you don't have >1GB of memory (for use as disk cache).
appications like Photoshop and (large pst) outlook will run much faster if you have a fast hdd.
i'm actually considering getting another 4 300Gb SATA drives to set up RAID5 on my mythtv box. just don't have the cash now...
somewhat a myth... a Striping raid only benefits sequential reads to the disc but random reads from the drive would not be benefitted.STRIPING : Loading a BF2 map will be 1.4 times faster on a striped set than on a single disk. Proved this on a Gigabyte Motherboard's SATA Hardware Raid.
Previously it was "home use", now it is "average home user". make up your mind!James said:Please educate me or just humour me, either one, and let me know the benifits of RAID 0 stripping for your average home user?
andres101 said:Previously it was "home use", now it is "average home user". make up your mind!
the average home user does not have a 2Gb PST file, doesn't play disk intensive games and doesn't edit graphics in photoshop.
If you haven't gotten the hint by now, we'll spell it out for you: there is no place, and no need for a RAID-0 array on a desktop computer. The real world performance increases are negligible at best and the reduction in reliability, thanks to a halving of the mean time between failure, makes RAID-0 far from worth it on the desktop.
There are some exceptions, especially if you are running a particular application that itself benefits considerably from a striped array, and obviously, our comments do not apply to server-class IO of any sort. But for the vast majority of desktop users and gamers alike, save your money and stay away from RAID-0.
If you do insist on getting two drives, you are much better off putting them into a RAID-1 array to have a live backup of your data. The performance hit of RAID-1 is just as negligible as the performance gains of RAID-0, but the improvement in reliability is worthwhile...unless you're extremely unlucky and both of your drives die at the exact same time.
When Intel introduced ICH5, and now with ICH6, they effectively brought RAID to the mainstream, pushing many users finally to bite the bullet and buy two hard drives for "added performance". While we applaud Intel for bringing the technology to the mainstream, we'd caution users out there to think twice before buying two expensive Raptors or any other drive for performance reasons. Your system will most likely run just as fast with only one drive, but if you have the spare cash, a bit more reliability and peace of mind may be worth setting up a RAID-1 array.
Bottom line: RAID-0 arrays will win you just about any benchmark, but they'll deliver virtually nothing more than that for real world desktop performance. That's just the cold hard truth.
i mentioned that i was considering using RAID5 in my mythtv box (because of the redundency). that does not take anything away from my post (regarding striping RAID0).James said:Well I was also talking about RAID 0 and then you throw in that u want RAID 5... make up your mind!