P
Paco
pH meter
mgraffeo is right about keeping drives as empty as possible, as performance slows when you start to fill up space. I've seen many charts showing transfer speed decrease as free disk space decreases.
I run a stripe set IDE RAID on two of my 30gig 7200rpm WD ATA100 HDD's, and the benchmark tests have shown great performance. It almost doubled the read/write speed! I did find that with my new 8MB cache 80gig WD 7200rpm ATA100 HDD that it is quite close to the RAID pair though - at least in read speed. I prefer the 8mb cache drive for audio even though it's slightly slower than the RAID pair b/c the risk of drive failure is half of that of the double drive setup.
BTW - you don't really need SCSI. Just do your homework on web hard drive speed tests and you'll find many IDE drives are faster than many SCSI drives.
One more note - when you format the disk for audio, use large cluster sizes, since audio files tend to be large ... the rational is that it's faster to carry ten big boxes than 100 small boxes, or something like that.
Word.
I run a stripe set IDE RAID on two of my 30gig 7200rpm WD ATA100 HDD's, and the benchmark tests have shown great performance. It almost doubled the read/write speed! I did find that with my new 8MB cache 80gig WD 7200rpm ATA100 HDD that it is quite close to the RAID pair though - at least in read speed. I prefer the 8mb cache drive for audio even though it's slightly slower than the RAID pair b/c the risk of drive failure is half of that of the double drive setup.
BTW - you don't really need SCSI. Just do your homework on web hard drive speed tests and you'll find many IDE drives are faster than many SCSI drives.
One more note - when you format the disk for audio, use large cluster sizes, since audio files tend to be large ... the rational is that it's faster to carry ten big boxes than 100 small boxes, or something like that.
Word.