• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Need a good pci-e Sata III Raid controller

Rakewell

Platinum Member
Sorry if in wrong forum.

I have an evga 4 way sli classified, which doesn't have SATA III/USB 3.0. (II/2.0)

I just bought 2x256 830s from Amazon, and I want to set a raid 0 array for OS/Games.

Can someone recommend a decent controller? I want to be able to boot from it without issues, and the Newegg reviews are fraught with bad reviews. (I know to take them with a grain of salt however.)

Can anyone recommend one?

Thanks guys.
 
generally anything that is pci-4 x4 or better should be enough. x1 is going to be pointless and x2 does not exist.

how much are you looking to spend as most cards at x4 are raid of some kind.
 
Hey man,

Thanks for your response. The card would go into a free 8x/16x slot on the classified between two 580s.

I'd like to keep it under $50 if possible, I'm not looking to shatter records.

Would like to have more than two SATA connectors on the card, but can handle it if it's not there.

Also, dunno if possible, but would love to have USB 3.0 as well.

Thoughts?

Thanks again-
 
Last edited:
How much are you willing to spend...?

If you get a cheap PCIe x1 card, you will be limited to 500MB/s even with both drives active.

Also I must warn about RAID0, in case one drive fails for any reason you loose your data. So a robust backup system is required...

About the USB3 controller, if you have a free slot, just grap the cheapest one with an external power connector...🙂
 
How much are you willing to spend...?

If you get a cheap PCIe x1 card, you will be limited to 500MB/s even with both drives active.

Also I must warn about RAID0, in case one drive fails for any reason you loose your data. So a robust backup system is required...

About the USB3 controller, if you have a free slot, just grap the cheapest one with an external power connector...🙂

I'd like to spend 50 or less. And I know all about Raid0, I've done it before and keep mad backups and images. 🙂

I have an open PCI-e 8x/16x slot and am looking for an affordable card with 2/4 SATA ports for Raid that can boot from an EVGA 4-way Classified without trouble. Looking for speed, but don't need to break records.
 
Cough up the cash for a quality controller like a LSI MegaRAID 9260-4i and save yourself A LOT of trouble and buyers remorse.

Those $50 RAID cards are a joke.

If you can afford 4 SSDs and RAID0, a ~$300 controller for them shouldn't be out of reach.
 
Cough up the cash for a quality controller like a LSI MegaRAID 9260-4i and save yourself A LOT of trouble and buyers remorse.

Those $50 RAID cards are a joke.

If you can afford 4 SSDs and RAID0, a ~$300 controller for them shouldn't be out of reach.

Exactly.

An LSI 9260-4i + Fastpath software is @ 400.00.

Anything less isn't worth it......take it from someone who's been there. 🙂
 
Cough up the cash for a quality controller like a LSI MegaRAID 9260-4i and save yourself A LOT of trouble and buyers remorse.

Those $50 RAID cards are a joke.

If you can afford 4 SSDs and RAID0, a ~$300 controller for them shouldn't be out of reach.

Dunno where you got 4 SSDs from my post...

I bought two from Amazon yesterday which almost broke the back for me at $300 total. I don't really have $400 for a controller, nor do I need one. There's got to be one out there that can do a simple raid!
 
Also,

I hate to be a pain in the ass, but I don't understand why I have to spend so much money on a controller.

What's wrong with this one?

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...ers-RAID-Cards


Cus it's crap. You have already been given the best advice if you don't want to spring for something more expensive. Use the Intel ports. The drivers are good, the latency is good, and running at SATA2 speeds is not going to affect your 4K reads, which is what affects user experience the most. Using one of those cheap cards means crap drivers, crap latencies, and crap 4K randoms, which is the opposite of what you should want.
 
Cus it's crap. You have already been given the best advice if you don't want to spring for something more expensive. Use the Intel ports. The drivers are good, the latency is good, and running at SATA2 speeds is not going to affect your 4K reads, which is what affects user experience the most. Using one of those cheap cards means crap drivers, crap latencies, and crap 4K randoms, which is the opposite of what you should want.

Fair enough. Thanks man. :thumbsup:
 
Upgrade to a Intel Sata 6g board for the price of your RAID card budget? If you are only running two drives, onboard Intel can't be beat.
 
Back
Top