I have ran a raid 1 config on my last two rigs. Twice I have had a problem. I tried to install a new disk and was not successful. I resorted to other backups etc. to solve the problem. I am cosidering on the new Win 7 install to scrap raid and go to another scheme for saving my operating system in case of a catastrophic failure.
Cons for raid:
speed reduction
uses up an extra disc
I think if I took the extra disk and put it in a dock and cloned the os to it once in a while. In the event of failure I could just replace the disk.
Does this sound reasonable?
Hi, Sounds like I've had similar problems. My PC was built for me with RAID 1 config. Here's my PC info:
- Processor : Intel i5 650 Dual Core 3.20 GHz Cache 4MB Threads: 4
- Hard Drives (2) : SEAGATE BARRACUDA 3.5” INTERNAL 500GB 16 MB SATA 3 (formerly Raid 1 Config) P/N: 9SL142-302
- Mother Bd : ASUS PRO P7P55D-E (Raid 0,1,5,10 capable)
P/N: 90-MIBBN0-G0AAY00Z
- Memory : OCZ 4GB DDR-3 P/N: OCZ30B1600LV4GK Speed: 1600M Unbuffered Timing: 9-9-9-24 1.65V
- Video Card : ZOTAC GeFORCE 9500 ZT-95TEK2M-FSL 1GB GDDR2
- DVD Drive : SAMSUNG 22x DVD-RW
When I first started using my PC (RAID 1) , it ran error-free for about 4 months, then an intermittent problem appeared. The PC would freeze up. Upon reboot, the Intel Matrix Storage Console utility would report "array errors" in the RAID 1 array and would do the self-rebuild of the array. The intermittent freeze-up errors would continue but with no apparent pattern in their frequency. The problem that I had though was that after one of the freeze-up problems, the RAID 1 wouldn't resume upon reboot. The Intel Matrix Console would report "plug-in disabled" and as a layman, when it comes to RAID knowledge, I couldn't recover the Raid array as I'm not familiar enough with RAID to recover the array. My PC has a 2-yr warranty so I took it to the store and they said the problem was the GForce Video Board overheating as the fan onboard was not running. They installed a new/differnt Video card.
The PC ran (still RAID 1 config) for almost 2 months without any issues, then the original symptom intermittent freeze-up problem returned. I disabled RAID 1 in the BIOS as a troubleshooting step to eliminate RAID as a possible source of the intermittent problem.
So far, PC's running ok but it'll have to run at least 4-6 months, imo, before I can declare it "fixed" and say that RAID 1 was the problem.
I bought a couple of hot-swap HD racks, mainly for ease of occasional HD cloning. So I gave up on RAID 1 for now as, with a home PC, I plan on cloning on a 3-month basis with "Acronis" 2011 software. That'll be good enough for me without RAID as I always backup daily data files as most do (Outlook PST, etc).
I've been trying to catch up with the AHCI vs IDE modes. I'm still running IDE mode in BIOS.
The question that I have about the BIOS setting comparisons is:
I have SATA drives in my PC. My BIOS is set to IDE. Does that mean that I'm actually running my HD's and DVD Drive in "IDE speed" mode even though my devices are connected to my Mother Bd SATA ports?
I haven't tried changing the BIOS setting yet, still taking notes about this as I'm going to be careful in the registy editor.