A-Data Launches New SSD RAID Enclosure
With A-Data's SSD RAID enclosure, you can switch between the seven supported RAID modes with a simple hardware switch. Take that, bulky RAID configuration screens!
For those of you sporting two or more solid-state-storage devices (and who isn’t?), A-Data has released a new RAID-themed enclosure that could help you boost your speeds and eliminate that ugly stack of drives that’s sitting inside your PC. The company’s new XPG Dual SSD 3.5-inch RAID enclosure combines two 2.5-inch SSDs into a single, 3.5-inch form-factor drive cage. You can run each drive independently from the other, or you can have the enclosure slaps your two drives together in one of seven different RAID modes: JBOD, RAID 0, RAID 1, Span, SAFE33, SAFE50, or GUI.
The neat and/or perilous part of the enclosure is that you can switch between the different raid modes using a switch on the back of the device. While we hope the device has some kind of foresight to not wipe your data and reinitialize a new RAID should you accidentally choose a new level, A-Data doesn’t mention exactly how the hardware switch works. You can install the RAID enclosure internally (connected via SATA cables) or you can opt to mount the entire drive box externally and connect using a standard USB cable.
You’ll have to wait a little bit for A-Data’s device to come to stores. The company expects the XPG Dual SSD 3.5-inch RAID enclosure to be ready by the end of the first quarter of 2009. Expect to shell out roughly $30 for a non-RAID version and $60 for an enclosure with RAID functionality.
Stay on the Cutting Edge
Join the experts who read Tom's Hardware for the inside track on enthusiast PC tech news — and have for over 25 years. We'll send breaking news and in-depth reviews of CPUs, GPUs, AI, maker hardware and more straight to your inbox.
Lenovo says demand for AMD's Instinct MI300 is record high — plans to offer AI solutions from all important hardware vendors
China's president says it doesn't need ASML — tells Dutch PM it will continue with advanced technological progress regardless
Nvidia Hopper H200 breaks MLPerf benchmark record with TensorRT — no Blackwell submissions yet, sorry
-
Wonder if this will work with standard 2.5" magnetic drives? $60 for a hardware raid 0 solution that doesn't need drivers or an expansion slot isn't bad...Reply
-
Shadow703793 stuart72Wonder if this +1will work with standard 2.5" magnetic drives? $60 for a hardware raid 0 solution that doesn't need drivers or an expansion slot isn't bad...Reply -
grieve Indeed, this thing would be a nice addition to my unit. It will also be a nice subtraction from my wallet.Reply -
nekatreven I've always wanted something like this for regular 2.5in hdds! You can't beat the portability and redundancy! I've never seen them available though!Reply
Perhaps it is a heat issue that keeps this from working for small hdds? I may have to try hdds in this thing and monitor the temps, at least until ssds catch up fully in capacity.
Most Popular
By Anton Shilov
By Aaron Klotz
By Aaron Klotz
By Paul Alcorn