RAID for Zero-G?
Cujo asks: "In all seriousness, I need a RAID that supports at least level 3 and stores > 500 GB, and I need to it work in zero-G (but not in a vacuum), and be able to take a fair bit of vibration and noise when turned off. I don't want to spend huge sums: I'm thinking well less than $50,000. I've looked at Apple's XServe/XRaid products, and they look great (about $10,000), but are they rugged enough and who is their competition? Some people make hardened RAIDs for military use, but I'm unfamiliar with the best candidates in that field (and do I really need mil spec?)."
The shock tolerances for the drive should be available on the technical data sheets, and I'm guessing that for off-and-parked it's in the 100's of g's or more. You probably want to consider building a custom RAID mount for it with lots of rubber grommets. I know here at WI some of our rocket guys have vibration mounts whose sole purpose is to shake the shit out of electronics and make sure it survives. Glue in and zip-tie all the connectors. All in all, it shouldn't require an engineering miracle to survive launch...
And hey, what's your experiment? :)
-- Bob
1^2=1; (-1)^2=1; 1^2=(-1)^2; 1=-1; 1=0.
It would seem to me that you would want max reliability on the flight, and max performance on earth. Is the few hours it would take to transfer >500GBs bad enough to preclude copying to a higher performance system upon return. (Assuming the most reliable and fatest solutions turn out to be utually exclusive)
As a side note: If you are sending an experiment up on the shuttle, aren't there resources at NASA you can check with? Surely someone has sent a hard drive into space before. As someone mentioned, The only moving parts would be in the drives, so everything else is probably more robust than the drives, they are the weak link you need to worry about.
Spencer Ogden
An array of the model of hard drives normally used in a laptop would probably be ideal since it is most likely designed to:
- withstand greater accelerations (laptops get banged around a lot more than desktops/servers)
- use less power (since laptops run on batteries)
- have a smaller size
- create less heat
I'd suggest doing some research to gather the model number of hard drives used in some of the high-end laptops and then go from there.Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF