7:40 AM - 08/10/2007 by
Patrick Schmid
- Email |
- Print |
- Comments (2) |
- Share
Adaptec RAID 3805

Atto Express SAS R348

ICP 5085BL

Raidcore RC5252-8

Sponsored links
Related forums topics
Best offers
|
My Book Essential Edition External... | $148.00 ServerSupply.com More info |
|
My Passport Essential 500GB Portable... | $139.99 OfficeMax More info |
|
eGo Desktop Portable 1TB Hard Drive... | $115.99 Dell Home More info |
|
WD Elements External 1.5TB 3.5" Hard... | $129.99 Newegg.com More info |
|
FreeAgent Go Portable 500GB Hard... | $99.99 STAPLES More info |
Popular Searches
Partners
The Games selection
violent :
Interactive Buddy
Unwind on your interactive buddy: Do anything you want to him, it will earn you money, and you can buy other stuff to torture him with.
|
violent :
More Mindless Violence
Basic shooting game, but still so powerful! Use the mouse to take aim and shoot at the little beasties before they get to you. Use Space to reload....
|
Ads






...well,
- Unless RaidCore is trying to peddle their VST Pro software,...aka as Fulcrum proprietary based ? which BTW you said no to, I don't see any advantages here.
Why?, ZFS is free !
And, where are the Drives for Solaris, or the xBSD's , or even MacOSX !!!?
-and still no, becuase their newer 54xx series doesn't support the other 'ix OS's.
Nope, unfortunately, not much to see here.
so, based on the above, Adaptec 5805,... or Areca,... blows this.
-Rikster
I think this paragraph has an error. I believe it should read
For SAS, the two connector segments were merged, which makes it possible to attach a SATA drive to a SAS controller using the continuous connector, but you cannot hook up a SAS hard drive to a SATA controller using the SATA connector (SFF 8482).
In fact I believe the statement should have less emphasis on the connector as its the actual controller that appears to limit the connectivity, the connector is just keyed to allow you to plug SATA drives into SAS but not the other way around.
from wikipedia: "SATA 3.0 Gbit/s drives may be connected to SAS backplanes, but SAS drives may not be connected to SATA backplanes."
I believe the fact that signaling voltages are nearly double on a SAS drive is significant to mention.
Let me know if I am wrong, I just started playing around with a bunch of SAS drives so I am figuring this out as I go.