1x640gb or 2x320gb??

Associate
Joined
9 Jan 2009
Posts
851
Location
Olney
For a gaming and video PC...

Western Digital Caviar Black 640GB SATA-II 32MB Cache - OEM (WD6401AALS)

or...

Hitachi Deskstar 7K1000.B 320GB SATA-II 16MB Cache - OEM (0A38018) X2

I really don't know which would be better.
Please help :)
 
Yes, RAID 0 is my plan for two drives. Though tbh I don't see the point if I can have the same storage space in one drive - taking up less space.
 
The WD drive is a great drive, and unless you need a RAID1 partition now, I would go for the single WD drive. Reason being that you mention you will use it for video, so you will probably want to increase capacity later either way, meaning you'll have less drives.

However, getting two drives now gives you more flexibility now with matrix RAID (eg. RAID0 partition and also a RAID1 partition for backups).
 
Would the two smaller drives be faster than the WD?

yes, the theory is that by having two drives you can read/write to them at the same time.

as to if its worth the hassle or not, that is another question and i would do some more reading up before you decide the best option.

with Raid0 both drives combine to look like one drive, but if one of them fails you lose the data on both of them... also raid arrays can fail.

this is not a problem if you have a good backup system in place
 
If you need the extra space for storage get a single drive, but if you want to put games, applications, operating system etc on it then go for raid0.

raid is performance (at risk) while 1 drive is at less risk.
 
No, it doesn't increase the chance of a drive failing.

Hadn't thought sbout this until now, but the fact that each drive only writes half the amount of data, then I suppose it could be argued that the risk of failure is not double (yet still more than one) when using two drives.
 
If failure probability in given time is x for one drive with two such drives propability for one such event is 2x and because of even single failure is enough in case of RAID0 reliability is basically halved/failure probability doubled compared to single drive.


you're only writing half the amount on each drive in RAID0, so the head may be over the platter for slightly less time. :D
Read/write heads are there in any case if you have drive running.
And manufacturers would probably know it but I doubt that halving amount of transfers has that big decreasing effect to failures. (lot of other areas where weakest individual part can be)
 
Back
Top Bottom