Hmmm you're saying that you are keen on RAID for redundancy but you are using it for backup - these aren't the same thing though often confused.
RAID is primarily aimed at availability ie you can continue working even though you have lost a drive and the array is being rebuilt. It's purpose is not really backup. The only thing you are protected against is hard drive failure, whilst this is a biggie there are also lots of other things threatening your precious data (theft, fire etc.) And any external event that could cause a single drive to fail could have the same effect on other drives in the array, in which case you are not protected.
I'm just not sold on the use of RAID within a home setup I think it gives people false comfort.
Hmmmmm. Yes and no.
Lets take a home environment, not a corporate banking environment as an example.
You want to protect you data, eg your rips, against the not very likely event of hard drive failure. So what do you do?
Use Raid 1, which is two hard drives mirrored!!!!! In the unlikely event one breaks then the other has a perfect copy.
Why raid 1? Because its a simple mirror. If a hard drive fails you can take out the working hard drive and stick it in your pc and read the data. If you use any other form of raid you might not be able to do this. For instance most other backup boxes, eg drobo etc use proprietary file systems. So you cant take the hard drives and read them on your PC.
What can go wrong with raid 1?
1) Your box gets stolen etc. Solution use another external hard drive to backup your raid 1 of the same size as each individual hard drive. Do a synch backup each week and leave the external hard drive locked in a safe in another location. I have a friend who does this.
2) The Raid 1 box breaks, eg the controller explodes one evening. Not a problem as the raid 1 discs are readable in your PC.
The disadvantage of raid 1 is wasted disc drive space. I.E. you need to double your drives. But drives are so cheap these days that this IMO is irrelevant.
If you wanted to be really anal, you could have an array of raid boxes, each using different hard drives of different manufacturers sourced and bought from different vendors. You could double this protection by using different raid boxes with different chip set controllers. Then you could spread your boxes over different locations etc.
But then again, for your dvd rips, I would just go with a raid 1 backup option and maybe the added protection of a external hard drive.
