<< Dell's site is messed up too, you can't get a 36GB 15K drive as a second drive unless you get the RAID version of the drive which appears to be slightly different than the regular drive. You can however get a 36GB 15k non RAID drive as a third drive. Huh? >>
I've never heard anything about a SCSI requirement that they must be RAIDed to use two SCSI drives (I only use 1 SCSI drive in each of my machines). That must really suck or maybe you are wrong. The only requirement from Dell about getting a 3rd drive to mix SCSI and IDE is that you must purchase a SCSI cable for $49. No where does it state that you must purchase their expensive RAID cards.
<< Once again, any enthusiast or business person spending their own money on a SCSI system, is not going to by it preinstalled in a Dell system (or HP/Compaq even less likely), so those prices are worthless. >>
Dell and other manufactuers make base machines at far less than the price that anyone can legally build on their own (software, software, software). They then charge a fortune for everything beyond the base. They charge triple for memory, double for video cards, and double for extras like a SCSI drive. That is where they make their money. This whole thread was specifically about NON-enthusiasts who don't home build their own machines. These NON-enthusiast people frequently pay the high costs for the extra memory, video card upgrade, or drives.
The fact is, even if you install them yourself, they cost more. Typical use of computers (loading a game, playing a game, writing an email, viewing the web, storing MP3s, etc.) all get little benefit from SCSI. And thus even most enthusiasts don't spend the extra money to save a fraction of a second per file. If SCSI drives came down in price, then almost everyone would have them since they are faster for small files.