Hard Drives Made for RAID Use
An anonymous reader writes "Hard drive giant Western Digital recently released a very interesting product, hard drives designed to work in a RAID. The Caviar RE SATA 320 GB is an enterprise level drive without native command queueing and uses an SATA interface. In works better in RAID than other drives because of features like its time-limited error recovery and 32-bit CRC error checking, so it is an option when previously only SCSI drives would be considered."
Sheesh, this is a VERY thinly disguised ad. Here's a direct link to NewEgg $169. Has the same details as this "story."
Interesting that they don't have NCQ, whereas SCSI drives generally do (well, called TCQ on SCSI IIRC)
Is this just marketing speak, has it truly included scsi features, or could it actually be better performing than SCSI in a RAID array?
How does the lack of Native Command Queuing improve RAID performance? Generally I thought NCQ improved all drive's performance, and TFA says that NCQ is normally part of Enterprise High-Performance.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
The manufacturer specifically says to only use these in a RAID-1 configuration (mirroring). They have a reason for this: The error recovery mechanisim is abbreviated. So what does Sal do... He connects two drives in a RAID-0 configuration. Now his data reliability has gone to about 1/4 of a regular drive.
Is it just me, or did this review stink for lack of proper testing and comparison...
If I were comparing this product and it's performance, I certainly would not be benchmarking a SATA based RAID setup against a single Parallel ATA drive. Something in this arrangement just doesn't seem... well, logical.
If you were really going to try to impress me with it's performance, then you would have to show me how it compares to "non-RAID" optimized drives of near simular characteristics. Show me how this drive performs against, say, Hitachi SATA 320 gig drives using an identical test rig. Also show me how this drive compares to 320 gig SCSI drives. Show me the results as JBOD, RAID-0, RAID-1 and RAID-5. You know, like the real world.
While the graphs are pretty, I'm afraid that this "review" it fairly content-free.
Ron Gage - Westland, MI