0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 3214 times.
To me, RAID 5 is the best combination of safety and space usage. To have any data loss, you have to lose 2 drives at the same time. However, you get SIZEOFDRIVES * (NUMBEROFDRIVES -1) capacity. The other 'gotcha' is that all drives have to be the same size. Otherwise, they all operate at the size of the smallest drive.If you want more safety than that, you can mirror the RAID 5 array in a RAID 1 configuration. In that case, assuming 5 400 GB drives for the first array, you'd need 10 400GB drives to get the capacity of 4 400GB drives - but you'd have to lose the same 2 drives on both sets of 5 to not be able to retrieve it.Bryan
What lots are doing is a 2 drive RAID-1 with a third swappable for backup. Each time you swap a drive the array will be-build over the older drive. In this case you have a three drive redundancy. It’s the lest effective for space [(3) 500Gb drives = 500GB] but it is fool proof against a lost drive AND a failed array (lost partition) that can effect BOTH drives in the redundant array.
RAID is designed primarily to ensure continuous operation in the event of a disk failure. The only thing you gain is not being down during the time it takes you to connect or restore from your backup media.
George, I use older Infrant ReadyNas with 4 300G disks. I come home, turn it on, go 2 floors down and do my evening rip and listen. I turn it off when I go to bed. I haven't had any issues with overheating or noise (on a count of having 2 floors between my listening room and the relatively noisy box). I left it on for a week one time and I got notices of hot drives. I don't leave it on continuously anymore. BTW, I run Raid 5.
I really would like a solution that I can leave on all the time and not think about (like I currently have with my external drives connected to a pc). It sounds like the ReadyNAS box might not be the answer.