The External Storage Articles
- LaCie and SimpleTech Dual Drive Mammoths
- Sub-Terabyte External Hard Drives
- 500 GB External Drives Tested
- Is On-The-Go Storage Ready for Primetime?
- Bye Bye Tape, Hello 5.3 TB eSATA
- 2.5" External HDD Spring Fever
- RAID Boxes Run Riot
- The Sytrin SHF1 Hard Drive Cooler
- Storage With Style: WD MyBook Pro Edition
- IcyDock's MB559 Happily Marries eSATA and USB 2.0
1:00 AM - May 2, 2008 by
Patrick Schmid and Achim Roos
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: external, raid, storage
Topics: Business Servers
Syndication:
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: external, raid, storage
Topics: Business Servers
Syndication:
Table of Contents:
Benchmark Results
RAID 0 Transfer Rates


Sequential reads in RAID 0 max out at almost 320 MB/s on both devices, which equals 80 MB/s for each hard drive — an excellent result. The 3Ware solution needs at least a few outstanding commands to deliver full performance.
- Previous page Test Setup
- Next page RAID 1+0 Transfer Rates
Unlike a hardware solution, if the controller card dies, you can forget about getting your data back since there is no "Standard" for RAID. On Linux you could just put the drives into another PC, as the meta-data for software RAID on Linux is not going to change across different versions of Linux.
RAID 10 should be faster than any individual drive for reads and writes, and it should also be faster than RAID 5.
Something is wrong here - either with the hardware or the tests.