RAID-1 for Non-Bootable Drive

aawitek

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I am hoping to get a little help with what I want to set up.

I have an OCZ Vertex 3 SSD and 2 WD caviar blue HDDs. I have them installed on an ASUS Maximus IV Gene-Z MB. I have Win 7 Home Installed on the SSD and would like to set up a RAID 1 array with the HDDs for my data storage (music, pictures, etc.). From what I understand I must do a hardware RAID setup since Win 7 Home does not support the software RAID array.

I was hoping someone could provide guidance or a tutorial on how to do this. The only information I could find is how to install windows on the array and not use it as a non-bootable array for data storage.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 x64 Home
You set the array up in the motherboard BIOS first. Then windows will see it as one drive. After that you just format it and use it like any other drive.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 10 Education 64 bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II X4 980 Black Edition Deneb 3.7GHz
Motherboard
Asus M4N68T-M V2 µATX Motherboard
Memory
8GB 4GBx2 Kingston PC10600 DDR3 1333 Memory
Graphics Card(s)
Zotac NVIDIA Geforce GT640 2 Gig DDR3 PCIe
Sound Card
VIA VT1708s High Definition Audio 8-channel Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
22" LG E2242 1080p and 2 19" I-INC AG191D
Screen Resolution
1280x1024 - 1920x1080 - 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Crucial M100 256 GB SSD and 500 GB WD Blue SATA
PSU
Thermaltake TR 620
Case
Power Up Black ATX Mid-Tower Case
Cooling
Stock heatsink and fan
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless K350 Wave
Mouse
Logitech Wireless M570 Trackman Wheel
Internet Speed
80 Mbps Down 30 Mbps Up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
HP DVD1040e Lightscribe - External USB2
You set the array up in the motherboard BIOS first. Then windows will see it as one drive. After that you just format it and use it like any other drive.


I have set it up in the BIOS; however, only my SSD is in "my computer." The HDDs do not show up at all. In the disk management, they show up as two unallocated drives shown. If i format them separately they are assigned a different letter drive and do not operate as an RAID-1 array.

I must be missing something completely obvious.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 x64 Home
I'd reconsider going the RAID 1 route for your data. The reason I don't necessarily like RAID1 mirrors for data is that if you do something silly, or get a virus, with a RAID configuration it's going to wipe out both drives at the same time. I instead would run with 1 drive as a primary and have a job backing up the first drive to the second one regularly or mirroring the data in intervals (such as every 4 hours). This way, a mistake wont' wipe your data in both places.

Regardless, remember that RAID is NOT a substitute for backing up. It provides redundancy, but should NEVER, EVER be confused with a backup.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self-Built in July 2009
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Q9550 2.83Ghz OC'd to 3.40Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R rev. 1.1, F12 BIOS
Memory
8GB G.Skill PI DDR2-800, 4-4-4-12 timings
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 1280MB Nvidia GeForce GTX570
Sound Card
Realtek ALC899A 8 channel onboard audio
Monitor(s) Displays
23" Acer x233H
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M 80GB Gen 2 SSD
Western Digital 1TB Caviar Black, 32MB cache. WD1001FALS
PSU
Corsair 620HX modular
Case
Antec P182
Cooling
stock
Keyboard
ABS M1 Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G9 Laser Mouse
Internet Speed
15/2 cable modem
Other Info
Windows and Linux enthusiast. Logitech G35 Headset.
I'd reconsider going the RAID 1 route for your data. The reason I don't necessarily like RAID1 mirrors for data is that if you do something silly, or get a virus, with a RAID configuration it's going to wipe out both drives at the same time. I instead would run with 1 drive as a primary and have a job backing up the first drive to the second one regularly or mirroring the data in intervals (such as every 4 hours). This way, a mistake wont' wipe your data in both places.

Regardless, remember that RAID is NOT a substitute for backing up. It provides redundancy, but should NEVER, EVER be confused with a backup.


I appreciate the recommendation. Since I apparently can not get my drives set up the way I would like them, I may have to go that route.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 x64 Home
If windows is seeing two separate drives then the RAID array didn't get setup correctly. I didn't look up your motherboard but some have dedicated RAID SATA ports and your drives have to be connected to them for it to work. If you really want to try it go over your motherboard manuals instructions. As mentioned RAID-1 only protects you if one drive fails hardware wise. If your file system gets mangled by a virus or windows glitches, it glitches both drives.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 10 Education 64 bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II X4 980 Black Edition Deneb 3.7GHz
Motherboard
Asus M4N68T-M V2 µATX Motherboard
Memory
8GB 4GBx2 Kingston PC10600 DDR3 1333 Memory
Graphics Card(s)
Zotac NVIDIA Geforce GT640 2 Gig DDR3 PCIe
Sound Card
VIA VT1708s High Definition Audio 8-channel Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
22" LG E2242 1080p and 2 19" I-INC AG191D
Screen Resolution
1280x1024 - 1920x1080 - 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Crucial M100 256 GB SSD and 500 GB WD Blue SATA
PSU
Thermaltake TR 620
Case
Power Up Black ATX Mid-Tower Case
Cooling
Stock heatsink and fan
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless K350 Wave
Mouse
Logitech Wireless M570 Trackman Wheel
Internet Speed
80 Mbps Down 30 Mbps Up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
HP DVD1040e Lightscribe - External USB2
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