Originally posted by: Missing Ghost
I try to use scsi/sas in all my computers when the budget permits it. I buy all my stuff on ebay. I got 10x 36GB 10krpms that were produced in 2004/2005 for around 30-35$ CAN + shipping each.
This is true, as seen in the 150GB Raptor benchmarks at StorageReview. I had considered a 15KRPM SAS setup before seeing the results from the new Raptor (I may consider it again depending on how the Seagate 15K.5 series performs). However, for the time, my first-gen 36GB Raptor is performing adequately, so it would be better for me to wait another year or so to see what happens in the realm of "affordable" SSDs (which would be SATA, by the way).Originally posted by: GarfieldtheCat
No, SCSI hard drives are optimized (in the drive firmware) for multi-user server operations. For single person use, the 10K raptor is as fast or faster then the current 15K SCSI drives. Plus, you would need to get a SCSI controller and cable for any SCSI drives, which owould increase the cost even more over a raptor.
If you want a fast HD, get the 150Gig Raptor...
Originally posted by: ProviaFan
This is true, as seen in the 150GB Raptor benchmarks at StorageReview. I had considered a 15KRPM SAS setup before seeing the results from the new Raptor (I may consider it again depending on how the Seagate 15K.5 series performs). However, for the time, my first-gen 36GB Raptor is performing adequately, so it would be better for me to wait another year or so to see what happens in the realm of "affordable" SSDs (which would be SATA, by the way).Originally posted by: GarfieldtheCat
No, SCSI hard drives are optimized (in the drive firmware) for multi-user server operations. For single person use, the 10K raptor is as fast or faster then the current 15K SCSI drives. Plus, you would need to get a SCSI controller and cable for any SCSI drives, which owould increase the cost even more over a raptor.
If you want a fast HD, get the 150Gig Raptor...
SAS is great because SAS controllers can be used with SATA drives (not the other way around though, of course). I was thinking of using a 15k SAS drive for the OS and apps, and a few high-capacity SATA drives in RAID5 for data storage - all on a PCIe SAS RAID HBA. However, even if I end up doing SATA RAID or plain SCSI using less expensive equipment (which is more likely), I'm going to use a PCIe controller because PCI is too slow - having a very fast SCSI drive on the PCI bus would simply starve everything else for bandwidth.Originally posted by: bob4432
sas is not the way to go because controllers are tooooo expensive unless you peeps know something i don't. just use a u160 card in a pci slot and you will be good to go for cheap - look for a lsiu160, adaptec 19160, 29160, 39160 and you will be setup.
Originally posted by: ProviaFan
SAS is great because SAS controllers can be used with SATA drives (not the other way around though, of course). I was thinking of using a 15k SAS drive for the OS and apps, and a few high-capacity SATA drives in RAID5 for data storage - all on a PCIe SAS RAID HBA. However, even if I end up doing SATA RAID or plain SCSI using less expensive equipment (which is more likely), I'm going to use a PCIe controller because PCI is too slow - having a very fast SCSI drive on the PCI bus would simply starve everything else for bandwidth.Originally posted by: bob4432
sas is not the way to go because controllers are tooooo expensive unless you peeps know something i don't. just use a u160 card in a pci slot and you will be good to go for cheap - look for a lsiu160, adaptec 19160, 29160, 39160 and you will be setup.
Originally posted by: GrammatonJP
SCSI was never design for the home user, it just gotten a lot cheaper and people got a lot richer to venture into scsi land. SAS is just expanded scsi so that we can add more drives. A business have different requirements than the home user.
SCSI for business
- RAID
- Speed
- Reliability/Warranty
RAID - ability to chain up more than 1 drive for storage needs, ability to provide redudancy
Speed - SCSI traditional have faster speed, only because business do not care about price, the faster they complete their job, the more money they can make
Reliability - 5 yr warranty and they rarely fail. Even when they do, it's always protected.
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Like bob said, you do not need scsi..
I'm in a migration phase.. I had 7 10k 146gb, 6 15k 73gb HS and 14 15k 73gb HS (scsi enclosure) with dual bus. W/Dual PCI-X raid adapter.
I had a huge need for storage but with today's high capacity sata drives, I been migrating my data servers off SCSI.
1. Power - You do NOT want to pay power
2. Noise - Ever heard 25 drive powering up at once ? its like a jet taking off
3. Point of failure - looking at my system, there ARE multiple points of failure, each expensive to fix.
Migration process
5 of the 7 146gb sold - keeping 2 for scratch disk
6 15k 73gb - retired into a P3 sever for tape and disk backups
14 15k 73gb enclosure - being sold on ebay, this guy will bring in 3-4k
New server
1 - 1u server using WD 500GB RE2 raid edition, on an areca pci-x controller
1 - 1u server waiting for Barracuda ES 750GB or higher drives. ES are enterprise storage, made for 100% duty at 24/7.. I rather have some TB hdd in pair for redudancy
2 server and 4 drives can cover my storage needs and I don't have to suffer with all the power requirement and noise.