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RAID Question

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  • Richard Andrew x64R Offline
    Richard Andrew x64R Offline
    Richard Andrew x64
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    If my motherboard supports SATA 3 GB's, and I set up a pair of drives in a RAID 0 (striping) configuration, does that make the effective data transfer speed faster than SATA 3GB, or is it always limited to 3GB's?

    The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

    V M 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

      If my motherboard supports SATA 3 GB's, and I set up a pair of drives in a RAID 0 (striping) configuration, does that make the effective data transfer speed faster than SATA 3GB, or is it always limited to 3GB's?

      The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

      V Offline
      V Offline
      Vaclav_
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I would rephrase the question - if I have a SATA disk capable of sending data at the rate of 10 GB per second what would be the effective data rate on my 3 GB/s motherboard? The overall data rate of a transmission path is controlled / limited by the slowest device in the path. You have asked an interesting question, I hope you realize that one of the advantages of striping the disks is to increase the storage capacity. Vaclav

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      • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

        If my motherboard supports SATA 3 GB's, and I set up a pair of drives in a RAID 0 (striping) configuration, does that make the effective data transfer speed faster than SATA 3GB, or is it always limited to 3GB's?

        The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

        M Offline
        M Offline
        mybura
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Depends on the RAID controller. If your RAID controller hooks up to one 3Gb port on the MB, you will be limited to 3Gb. If it is a PCIE card, depending on the number of PCIE lanes it uses, it might go over 3Gb. So be carefull of RAID cards that use only 1 lane. If you use software RAID (striping over volumes using Windows disk manager) you will get >3Gb. All of this is obviously based on the assumption that the drive runs a flat rate of 3Gb. The bottleneck is still the drive, not the interface (unless you can afford those already RAID configured SSDs) Hope that answers your question.

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