Re: New workstation | DAW pc

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Ken Restivo wrote:
On Sat, Sep 11, 2010 at 10:37:26PM +0200, Arnold Krille wrote:
On Saturday 11 September 2010 17:09:23 Mark Knecht wrote:
On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 11:09 AM, rosea grammostola

<rosea.grammostola@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 7:45 PM, Mark Knecht <markknecht@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Processor: i5 750
I tried to set up RAID1 and RAID0 with the 1TB version of the Green
drives you are listing and they simply didn't work well. A lot of
these Green Series drives park the heads quite quickly (to save power)
but unfortunately this causes them to wear out faster. They are I
think generally better suited for machines that aren't on all the time
or in heavy use. Watch your SMART data if you go that way.

Why 2 drives by the way? One for the system and the second for audio?

Note that these RAID drives do tend to be a bit more noisy, but not
terribly, and may consume more power so you'll likely need to do a bit
more noise control than with the green drives.
One drive for / and /home, one for backup and audio

The plan was not to go for RAID, but wait till the SSD gets cheaper...

I have no experience with RAID...
I was not suggesting you use RAID. I was suggesting you possibly buy
data center drives (which happen to be RAID capable) because they have
better specs, last longer and don't cost all that much more (as a
percentage of the complete system cost) than green drives. Either
drive family will likely work well for you.
Last "special data center" hard-disks I bought failed on short before warranty was over and the other shortly after warranty was over.

(No data lost as they announced their fail in smart. And the important stuff is on raid1.)

Still I would go for two drives (and will so with my next machine). Get two different drives and have a raid1 for the really important stuff. Why two different? If you buy two of the exact same kind at exactly the same time, they will also fail at the same time which reduces your data-security... And don't try to tell me I am wrong, I've seen to many pairs of exactly-the-same drives fail at the same time...

Yeah, RAID stands for "Redudant Array of INEXPENSIVE Drives".

I've always her it was "Disks". ;-)

So, buying expensive drives would not be RAID, would it then? :-)

It would be the opposite of RAID: a SLED (Single Large Expensive Disk).

--
David
gnome@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
authenticity, honesty, community
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