- Jun 30, 2004
- 16,154
- 1,757
- 126
I'll try and make this simple and short.
2007, July: After extensively modding a pre-ATX Compaq ProLiant-Server case, I built my first LGA-775 system quad-core with 680i chipset and a 3Ware 9650SE hardware RAID controller. I chose the Seagate 7200.10 320GB drives, and installed four in RAID5 on that controller. And I THOUGHT that these things were running at 3GB/sec or full SATA2 potential.
Late 2007, early 2008: I picked up some spare Seagate drives of the same size, model and spec -- for spares in case a drive in the RAID5 went bad. Two of these, I used to build a VISTA64 system with RAID0 this year.
December, 2008: One of those drives went "south" -- went "on the fritz" -- and I ordered WD Caviar Black 500's to replace both of them.
Now I have the Seagates from the VISTA system, and bought a "BlacX" ThermalTake docking station (eSATA and USB2) so that I could test them and use the good one for backup.
I'm getting old -- over 60 -- and my eyes aren't what they used to be. I needed a magnifying glass to review the diagram and small print on the manufacturer's label for the Seagates.
NOW I discover that the default tiny gray shunt or jumper on the drives limits their operation to 1.5 GB/sec operation!! Yeah! I've been running that RAID5 array on the other system as they were shipped -- with the jumper installed.
I could KICK myself!! I started working with this technology in 1982, and this is something I should've caught. I just can't believe it.
Now -- I'm guessing that I can remove the shunts/jumpers on all four drives in the RAID5 array, and performance will increase by leaps and bounds.
Does anyone know if I'll run into problems -- having created the array for drives running at a slower speed? I've gone all this time without capturing the full potential of either the controller or the array of drives attached to it.
2007, July: After extensively modding a pre-ATX Compaq ProLiant-Server case, I built my first LGA-775 system quad-core with 680i chipset and a 3Ware 9650SE hardware RAID controller. I chose the Seagate 7200.10 320GB drives, and installed four in RAID5 on that controller. And I THOUGHT that these things were running at 3GB/sec or full SATA2 potential.
Late 2007, early 2008: I picked up some spare Seagate drives of the same size, model and spec -- for spares in case a drive in the RAID5 went bad. Two of these, I used to build a VISTA64 system with RAID0 this year.
December, 2008: One of those drives went "south" -- went "on the fritz" -- and I ordered WD Caviar Black 500's to replace both of them.
Now I have the Seagates from the VISTA system, and bought a "BlacX" ThermalTake docking station (eSATA and USB2) so that I could test them and use the good one for backup.
I'm getting old -- over 60 -- and my eyes aren't what they used to be. I needed a magnifying glass to review the diagram and small print on the manufacturer's label for the Seagates.
NOW I discover that the default tiny gray shunt or jumper on the drives limits their operation to 1.5 GB/sec operation!! Yeah! I've been running that RAID5 array on the other system as they were shipped -- with the jumper installed.
I could KICK myself!! I started working with this technology in 1982, and this is something I should've caught. I just can't believe it.
Now -- I'm guessing that I can remove the shunts/jumpers on all four drives in the RAID5 array, and performance will increase by leaps and bounds.
Does anyone know if I'll run into problems -- having created the array for drives running at a slower speed? I've gone all this time without capturing the full potential of either the controller or the array of drives attached to it.