My plan was to get an ASUS x570 mobo. Wasn't going to do RAID just a question of 1TB vs 2 500GB.I just noticed that those SSDs are PCIe 4.0 ones. I hope you want to buy those for an x570 motherboard.
Buying two SSDs still doesn't make sense though. Such fast SSDs will only become relevant when games with Direct Storage support will come to PC, and that won't work when the drives are behind a RAID volume.
Also, are you sure you'll be able to fit all your games with operating system on1TB? Assuming you want to buy those for a gaming PC.
I personally wouldn't buy PCIe 4.0 SSDs yet, too expensive and not much benefit in the vast majority of applications.
Advantages/disadvantages? My initial thought because of sale on 500gb, two of them might be best option.
Wasn't going to do RAID just a question of 1TB vs 2 500GB.
You're getting twice as much for TBW as well 150, 300, 600 for 256GB, 512GB, 1TB on the 980 Pro.Also, keep in mind that with a lot of NVMe drives, the larger capacity variants are a bit faster than the ones of lesser capacity, assuming you are comparing in a non RAID/striped situation.
Assuming RAID0:
2x drives = 2x the failure rate
2x drives = less future expandability
2x drives = raid -> no SAM transfer from drive
2x drives = ?software? raid = cpu load
2x drives = May require special drivers to boot windows. May complicate recovery of data on drive failure. May require special driver to read from Linux.
2x drives != 2x speed
speed difference is imperceptible in daily usage
not worth the trouble
I don't really have a cache of games yet. Plan on flight sim and car racing for now. There are cheaper options for SS. I chose Samsung 980 PRO because it was rated the best. 970 EVOs are even cheaper $130 1TB
2x drives = 2x failure... actually no... that's not statistics works in this type of situation.
4x drives are SATA6G. What else are you going to do with SATA? Your not eating PCI-E lanes using SATA.
4x drives = software.... are you really going to get picky with cpu load with today's processor that's not a laptop? How many people can you think of that will really need that 8-10core processor?
They fit nicely in something like this:
https://www.amazon.com/ICY-DOCK-Trayless-Hot-swap-Mobile/dp/B072618W1D/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=2.5+hotswap&qid=1607319365&s=electronics&sr=1-4 So it looks like a single storage bank.
nVME's are great, but so are 10G network cards, RTX 3080, possibly a streaming caption card, and other cards which all use PCI-E lanes.
In RAID 0 it is exactly that.
2x the drives = 2x the things to go wrong. If any drive in RAID 0 fails, the entire array fails, data is forever gone, and function is lost until repaired.
Look at it this way:
There are say 10 points of failure on a single drive. They each have 1/100th chance of occurring. That gives the 1x drive system (1/100) * 10 = 1/10 chance of failure of the system.
Now lets say you use 2x of those drives in RAID 0, each with 10 points of failure, each with 1/100 chance of occurring. This gives you 20 points of failure, for a (1/100) * 20 = 2/10 chance of failure of the system.
It is exactly 2x probability of failure.
-----------------
4x drives = 4x chance of failure in RAID 0
Why not switch to RAID 5 at that point? At least that way a drive can be lost and the system can still function.
We all make our own choices. To me, if I am going to have my CPU involved, I would at least have RAID5 redundancy, at least that way I get something for losing a thread.
That looks very cool!
Depends on the system. Many systems can have NVMe drives installed without sacrifices.
i can play the black cat on your statement here, as its pure objectional to what your trying to do.
(NON nVME route in regards to R0)
2x drives = 2x failure... actually no... that's not statistics works in this type of situation.
As if 1 drive from both sets fail, your data fails anyhow.
So failure rate is the same on both sets, as your waiting for any one drive to fail.
I would say at worst, you got 1.5x and not 2x... but at least in a drive fail situation, since u have a extra, you can float your system on that
spare until your RMA or Replacement comes in, while you can not do that on a single drive.
Raid 0 on SSD's does have 1 big advantage, in that it spreads data across all drives, which means you get a much higher write endurance on the array.
4x drives are SATA6G. What else are you going to do with SATA? Your not eating PCI-E lanes using SATA.
4x drives = no SAM transfer... I do not think this applies to SATA drives, and only applies to nVME's.
4x drives = software.... are you really going to get picky with cpu load with today's processor that's not a laptop? How many people can you think of that will really need that 8-10core processor?
4x drives = windows 10 should pick up everything though uefi boot. The only issue is on a intel platform where VROC key is required for nVME.
4x drives is definitely not 4x speed, but its alike 3x well, it saturates the SATA6G lane. Whats even wonderful on top, it puts it close to real world difference between a single nVME in game loading time. SSD RAID 0 is fast, fast enough that latency issues which are typically seen on spinners are not even noticeable.
They fit nicely in something like this:
So it looks like a single storage bank.Amazon.com: ICY DOCK Quad Bay 2.5" SATA/SAS SSD/HDD Trayless Hot-swap Dock/Mobile Rack for 5.25 Drive Bay - flexiDOCK MB524SP-B: Electronics
Buy ICY DOCK Quad Bay 2.5" SATA/SAS SSD/HDD Trayless Hot-swap Dock/Mobile Rack for 5.25 Drive Bay - flexiDOCK MB524SP-B: Hard Drive Enclosures - Amazon.com ✓ FREE DELIVERY possible on eligible purchaseswww.amazon.com
So its totally YMMV, what is your objective in the storage you are going after.
And how you are going after it.
nVME's are great, but so are 10G network cards, RTX 3080, possibly a streaming caption card, and other cards which all use PCI-E lanes.
Homer what is it your trying to do with DATA?
I typically only recommend 1 nVME or 2 at most.. thats 8x pci-e lanes in a board limited by like 24lanes total.
Then i usually recommend stuffing the SATA ports, and using RAID to compensentate in storage capacity / speed.
If its gaming objective... get 1 single fastest largest nVME for boot.
Then get 2-3 largest possible you can find on deal SATA SSD and RAID 0 them.
Game load time and play difference is almost zilch on 3 x SSD Raid0 and you really want to keep your game drive off your main boot drive.
My recommendation:
980 Pro - boot drive.
3 x https://www.amazon.com/Silicon-Powe...d=1&keywords=1tb+gb+ssd&qid=1607321005&sr=8-5
For 2.7TB of storage R-0 @ 270 dollars, which should be excellent for gaming.
Why do you recommend games not be installed on the boot drive? I have my Samsung 850 EVO 2TB SSD with a 125GB Windows (OS and basic programs) C:\ partition and a 1875GB Data (games, music, and work files) D:\ partition and I saw no difference in performance compared to having my boot drive on a separate SSD. When I upgrade to an NVMe drive, I plan on getting a 2TB one and partition it the same way.
If using just a single drive, you can just partition the drive as a separate partition for the OS and a separate partition for data and that leaves the data partition untouched if reformatting the OS partition and reinstalling Windows on the OS partition. Now I have the OS/basic programs installed on a Samsung 860 EVO 250GB SSD and my Samsung 850 EVO 2TB SSD as my data/games drive. I plan on replacing the 860 EVO 250 GB with a 970 EVO Plus or a 980 Pro 250 GB NVMe in my next build as an OS drive and leaving my data/game on the 850 EVO 2TB and maybe replacing that one with either a 970 EVO Plus or 980 Pro 2TB (not released yet).
I understand what you are saying. Still you can't choose which SSD will fail first. It could be the SSD that has just the OS installed, or it could be the SSD that has your data files stored. If a person owns 2 cars, he can't choose which vehicle will have mechanical issues first, provided that he uses them both equally and takes care of his cars.
Such fast SSDs will only become relevant when games with Direct Storage support will come to PC, and that won't work when the drives are behind a RAID volume.