footballdude2k3
New Member
whats the difference?
Nope he has 4 SATA2 HDDs in RAID 0 (striping). Over all capacity of space and quicker write/read times. Only problem with that is...oh my sata is better than yours?
Taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAIDWhen one sector on one of the disks fails, however, the corresponding sector on every other disk is rendered useless because part of the data is now corrupted. RAID 0 does not implement error checking so any error is unrecoverable. More disks in the array means higher bandwidth, but greater risk of data loss.
pretty much every hd on the market today is sata 2.
not really. at least 1/3 of them are still sold with IDE interface![]()
Mine came with a tiny little jumper that limited it to 1.5GB/S. I had to get it out with a thumb tack.
WOW ide still exists
but what i was comparing sata 2 to sata. not ide
yeah i really don't get why they make a jumper that would limit the transfer rate
Which is why I perform almost daily backupsNope he has 4 SATA2 HDDs in RAID 0 (striping). Over all capacity of space and quicker write/read times. Only problem with that is...
Taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID
yeah i really don't get why they make a jumper that would limit the transfer rate
even without setting the jumper limit on the HD, i thought it would still be backwards compatible. if the HD is able to transfer up to 3gbps, and the mobo only allows, 1.5gbps, the wouldn't the 1.5gbps be the limiting factor? or would that mean that the HD will not be read at all?