Latest post Fri, May 16 2008 9:31 AM by janusz. 2 replies.
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  • Fri, May 16 2008 2:00 AM

    • esqueleto
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    • Joined on Mon, Apr 17 2006
    • NYC
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    matched drives

    Hi There:

    I need to set up a RAID for my system, because I am now getting more HD work and have a client as well who insists on going 1:1.  My internal SATA was fine before, but he just showed up on my doorstep with 1200G of material and I am drowning.  I have a Sonnet Fusion D500P enclosure arriving tomorrow as well as a Tempo SATA E4p PCIe card for my G5.  I was planning to purchase Seagate Barracuda 500 or 750 drives.  I saw one or two posts that recommended using MATCHED drives in an array.  Did they mean matched as in the same model/size/manufacturer (makes sense) or matched as in buying power tubes for a guitar amplifier, i.e. specifically matched units that are sold as a group?  How would I do this with the Barracudas?  Consecutive serial numbers?  Please advise, and thank you for your help.

    /bob

    Avid Xpress Pro 5.8.0/OSX 10.4.11/Dual 2.5 GHz PowerPC w/2.5GB DDRS SDRAM/LG L1951,Viewsonic VX924,Sony PVM 14-L1/NVIDIA GeForce 6600LE/SIIG FireWire 800... [view my complete system specs]
  • Fri, May 16 2008 2:34 AM In reply to

    Re: matched drives

    I woudn't necessarily worry about matching down to the Serial Numbers.  I would at least use the same brand/make/model.  If you buy several drives from a major supplier, you may actually get sequential S/N's though.

    Media Composer 3.0 w/Mojo (analog), HP xw8400, 1xQC 3.0GHz, 4GB RAM, FX 3700, 500GB Boot, 1 x 1TB & 1 x 500GB internal SATA media drives, 3-Ware 9690SA... [view my complete system specs]

    "Saving the world, one Avid at a time"

  • Fri, May 16 2008 9:31 AM In reply to

    • janusz
    • Top 500 Contributor
    • Joined on Thu, Oct 13 2005
    • Paris
    • Posts 180
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    Re: matched drives

    I strongly discourage any attempt to get sequential serial numbers for a RAID array!  actually you want to do the opposite.  Suppose the manufacturer has a problem on the production line...a batch of serial numbers have a less than optimal life expectancy...  By choosing hard drives from the same batch, you are, statistically, greatly increasing your risk of array failure.  For redundant arrays, I get drives from different sources exactly for this reason.

    janusz

    MC 3.0.5/G5 bipro 2G(with PCI-X) 2,5G RAM [view my complete system specs]

     

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