Half the chance of failure with the 1 TB. Sure, you don't care about data loss -- but what about not being able to use the storage until you get a replacement? Also, unless you have continuous backup you will lose some data. I'd hate to lose a day of playing (for example) Fallout 4 just because the daily backup hadn't run yet. Or to have to re-download a full game from Steam.
Raid was essentially for redundancy & for circumventing mechanical drives weakness in seek times and throughput. They are not needed today. Performance is a side issue. Forget the latest M.2, even older SATA2 drives have 60k IOPS and far outweigh the benefit of a raid array.
If you are min/max'ing and need space, buy two drives, just run them as two independent drives. Drive D:
C: OS
D: Games & Apps
Buying two M.2 512gb NVMe drives is better than having one 1T (in my opinion). It spreads the data out, thus spreads the heat out, and also utilizes a second controller as then data is directed & handling as efficiently as possible.
Except one big drive tends to perform better than 2 smaller ones. While that may be negligible, having all your spare area in one drive, not using up your 2nd NVMe port (and many mobos don't even have a second), etc. are also reasons to keep it to one.
Illogical: He already states he is choosing between one, or two. Thus he has two M.2 slots.
One LARGER drive may internally work slightly faster, than a single smaller drive, but that means nothing when two drives are being accessed independently from each other. And again, the speed difference Someone would be speaking about vs single larger chip, is inconsequential.
Point is: Raid arrays in 2017 are for nostalgia.
You do realize that the PCH on a modern mainstream chipset, limits overall bandwidth to PCI-E 3.0 x4, right? The same as ONE NVMe SSD. (All of the PCI-E fan-out lanes on the PCH, connect to the CPU via a DMI 3.0 interface, which is still PCI-E 3.0 x4 internally, essentially.Illogical: He already states he is choosing between one, or two. Thus he has two M.2 slots.
One LARGER drive may internally work slightly faster, than a single smaller drive, but that means nothing when two drives are being accessed independently from each other. And again, the speed difference Someone would be speaking about vs single larger chip, is inconsequential.
Point is: Raid arrays in 2017 are for nostalgia.
You do realize that the PCH on a modern mainstream chipset, limits overall bandwidth to PCI-E 3.0 x4, right? The same as ONE NVMe SSD. (All of the PCI-E fan-out lanes on the PCH, connect to the CPU via a DMI 3.0 interface, which is still PCI-E 3.0 x4 internally, essentially.
So, there's no point to multiple M.2 PCI-E SSDs on a mainstream platform chipset, RAID or no RAID.
But NVMe drives are connected by PCI-E 3.0 x4 to the PCH (system chipset). And then the chipset (ALL of it's connections, SATA6G, USB3.0, etc.) is shoe-horned back down into a PCI-E 3.0 x4 (DMI 3.0) to connect to the CPU.You do realize, that EVERY NVMe stick, has it's own controller..?
So in theory (& logic) if TWO drives are running independently of the other
Convenience, marketing, and Optane.Lastly... Larry, if there was no point, then why are there Mobo's with two M.2 slots..?