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I have 2 Seagate 7200 Hard Drives installed(you already know Opus!)
One is a 13 gig with my OS and Apps
The second one is a 20 gig for samples,sound files etc.

Rather than replacing one with a larger HD, I thought of just adding one more. Therefore, I could have one for the OS. Second for sound samples and Ghost image and the 3rd would be for sound/video files.

What do you think?

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anonymous Sun, 10/05/2003 - 07:07

Usually, the latest model drive is Master in a two-drive arrangement.

A 3rd drive makes perfect sense, if you can live without two CD devices on the second IDE channel. Making the 3rd drive a FAT32 volume leaves it open to making GHOST images of the system volume.

You can write GHOST images to an NTFS volume using the NTFSDOS device drivers for DOS. This is an expensive and very slow process compared to writing directly to FAT32.

MisterBlue Sun, 10/05/2003 - 09:47

You can connect up to 4 IDE devices to your two IDE ports on your motherboard (2 each). This could be 4 hard disk, 4 CD drives (doesn't make sense, I know) or any combination in between. So if you already have 2 HD's and 2 CD/DVD drives and you want to add one more HD then one CD/DVD has to go ...

Unless, of course, you don't mind adding another PCI-to-IDE/UDMA card. This would give you the possibility to connect another 4 IDE devices (for a total of 8). These cards are actually rather inexpensive. I just got a 160GB Western Digital disk that came with a UDMA card in the package. The performance is stellar... 40% faster than my next fastest HD which is no slouch either.

Hope this helps,

MisterBlue.

anonymous Tue, 10/14/2003 - 10:26

HeadsUp on adding a PCI controller card. All that traffic runs down the PCI bus; the same bus that handles your audio (assuming you have a PCI sound card).

Another solution is native support for 4 IDE controllers which some mobos offer. Or SATA (again, native support is important since some mobos have SATA connectors but they use a bridge to the PCI bus.. not good) drives. Or USB/firewire. Anything to keep that disk traffic away from the PCI bus.

tj

jonahsarc Tue, 10/14/2003 - 15:39

Would this be raid that can function merely as extra ide ports? Can all raid ports do this? How about a short list of DAW friendly boards that support this... :) or... maybe explain how to determine if a particular board will let me have more than 4 devices without configuring an array? What do I look for? What will the specs say?

mjones4th Thu, 10/16/2003 - 07:31

Originally posted by jonahsarc:
Would this be raid that can function merely as extra ide ports? Can all raid ports do this? How about a short list of DAW friendly boards that support this... :) or... maybe explain how to determine if a particular board will let me have more than 4 devices without configuring an array? What do I look for? What will the specs say?

jonahsarc,

Little bit of confusion here.

A RAID exists as a combination of drives, of some manner. The way some mobos handle RAID is by providing a chip which will control access to the disks attached to the onboard IDE controllers given that RAID is enabled. There is no such thing as a RAID port. Therefore, if we're talking IDE RAID, the 2 device per channel limitation still exists. So two channels = 4 devices, which may or may not be RAIDed together.

Of course a mobo is not limited to two IDE channels. That's what you need to look for in order to escape the 4 device limit. Or you could get a PCI IDE controller instead, as mentioned before.

Now for SCSI RAID mobos, one channel can handle up to 15 devices at a time. But you need SCSI drives (very expensive proposition).

mitz