Tech Report has posted a very indepth RAID performance test of multiple different controllers.  For those too lazy to read the entire article, here are the highlights:
That's good.
That's good too.
This isn't good.
Not much better here.
Wouldn't expect any boost here. CPU limited.
Same deal. Nothing worthwhile.
Notice a pattern here?
Final thoughts?
Not a very glowing view of RAID. But hey, if you want to spend twice as much to add a second drive, or more if you need a RAID controller too, while increasing your chances of data loss just so you can think you look cool by saying you run RAID, you're certainly free to do so.
edit:
duh, forgot to post a link to the article:
http://tech-report.com/reviews/2004q2/chipset-raid/index.x?pg=1
			
			Read times don't scale quite as dramatically as file creation times, but there's still a clear advantage to RAID.
That's good.
File Copy Test - Copy time
And we get another glorious example of RAID scaling...Otherwise, all the systems see faster performance moving from single drives to RAID 1 and 0.
That's good too.
Unfortunately, Business Winstone scores don't scale much at all. The performance benefit moving from a single drive to RAID 1 or RAID 0 is negligible at best.
This isn't good.
We see a little more scaling action in the Multimedia Content Creation Winstone, particularly moving to RAID 0, but the small performance boost probably isn't enough to justify the cost of a second hard drive.
Not much better here.
RAID doesn't offer much of a performance benefit over single-drive configurations in our DivX encoding test. Sure you can pick up a fraction of a frame per second by adding a second drive, but really, that's about it.
Wouldn't expect any boost here. CPU limited.
With the exception of the SiS964, which boots slowly with only a single drive, RAID doesn't do much to speed up boot times.
Same deal. Nothing worthwhile.
Perhaps our level load times will be more interesting...
Sorry. Nope.
Notice a pattern here?
Again, going to RAID doesn't speed things up a whole lot. The SiS964 and nForce3 250Gb both flirt with a one second slow-down moving from a single drive to RAID 1, but level load times are otherwise pretty consistent in the Unreal Tournament 2004 demo
Final thoughts?
Of course, I would be remiss not to point out how little performance impact different RAID levels had in our application benchmarks and stopwatch tests. Although multi-user and synthetic disk subsystem tests like IOMeter, HD Tach, and ATTO show clear differences between the performance of each RAID implementation and array configuration, the performance benefit in more real world applications is significantly less pronounced. Power users who regularly stress IO performance will no doubt notice a performance benefit moving from a single drive to striped array, but for less demanding users, the redundancy benefits (with no performance loss) associated with a mirrored array may be a better justification for adding a second drive.
Not a very glowing view of RAID. But hey, if you want to spend twice as much to add a second drive, or more if you need a RAID controller too, while increasing your chances of data loss just so you can think you look cool by saying you run RAID, you're certainly free to do so.
edit:
duh, forgot to post a link to the article:
http://tech-report.com/reviews/2004q2/chipset-raid/index.x?pg=1
				
		
			