Just remember the first rule of RAID 0
what allot of people don’t realize is if you build a RAID array and a drive fails can you replace the drive with the exact make and model? Raids work best when every disk in the array is the same model and revision. If you plan to build a 5 disk raid array you should also purchase a 6th drive to keep as a cold spare.
I built a RAID 5 array using three 500GB disks via mdadm under Linux. I assembled the array and formatted it. Within minutes of testing I was getting mail from mdadm telling me the array was degraded. I then began to test each disk for defects and lo and behold one disk was bad right from the start. I tried to RMA the disk but newegg had informed me those disks were now obsolete. Great. I was credited for the bad disk and purchased a new one that closely matched the other two. It was a nightmare as during some boots the disks went haywire and I would get a “Could not bd_claim sdaX” And it would hang for a while and I would have no array. It happend once in a rare while until it became a real problem. I kept my most precious data safely backed up on different disks I had spread around. It finally got so bad that I would have to constantly reboot the machine for up to ten times before the disks were synced up and the array worked. I purchased a 1TB disk and copied all the data off the array to it and used the 500gb disks in other systems. RAID is great for big fat storage arrays but it can become very sensitive and then one day POOF its all gone.
This is the reason OEM drives from Dell, Apple, HP etc. Cost four times what a retail drive would cost. The cost is no way associated with quality but rather consistency. Retail SATA drives are constantly changing: less/more platters, faster seek and read speeds and firmware revisions. Those costly OEM drives are the same disk every time right down to the inner workings and firmware. So if you buy an Apple 1TB disk on a sled and it takes a dump in three years you can be confident Apple will replace that drive with the EXACT same one. Its not a magical Apple disk of superior quality but a Maxtor/WD/Hitachi disk that is produced for Apple with no revision changes unless Apple orders it. Unlike retail drives which are changed at the manufactures whim.
So if you are building your own raid plan for failures and try to buy a spare for your array. I don’t know disk shelf live but it will save you down the line. Also keep a USB or 1394 disk around for backups. Spread your most precious data around like pictures home movies and documents. If you have a few computers around the house keep a mirror of that data one those machines. Music, and downloaded video can be re downloaded but home movies and pictures cannot. Put all the silly stuff on the raid along with the precious stuff for access but keep backups of the good stuff!










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