Originally posted by: Ronnie
how fast are frys rebates.
Originally posted by: bluslice
these babies usually cost around $100 on newegg.com so it is definitely a good deal especially if you want to buy two of these and raid em together. thanks for the deal!
Originally posted by: Bad_Dude
Fry's rebates are just as bad as Tiger Direct.
Originally posted by: Trikat
Originally posted by: Bad_Dude
Fry's rebates are just as bad as Tiger Direct.
But these are WD rebates.
Originally posted by: intogamer
where do u have to send it to?
Originally posted by: bluslice
the price of getting a single 74gb raptor vs. 2 x 36.7gb raptors is going to be about the same, true. but if i raid the two 36.7gb ones and decide the add one on later, then my hard drive performance will increase exponentially. so i think getting two 36.7gb raptors might be the better route for me.
Originally posted by: chilifries
Some helpful info.
Originally posted by: chilifries
Some helpful info.
Originally posted by: Devistater
Originally posted by: chilifries
Some helpful info.
http://www.storagereview.com/a...20040126WD740GD_2.html
This is a better link. Shows transfer rates and access times. 🙂
The 74gig raptor hits up to 72MB/sec sustained. The 36gig up to 57MB/sec (outer zone numbers, inner zone are slower since the rotational speed is a constant RPM). So there is a significant differance.
Assuming a raid could max out the rate of each drive (which would never happen), two 36gig drives could hit up to 104MB/sec and two 74gigs could hit 144MB.
Here's the numbers on a 8 drive array of some 8 meg cache drives (dont think its raptor, not sure):
http://www6.tomshardware.com/s...31114/raidcore-24.html
Hits max of 250meg/sec transfer rate with the RAIDcore pci-express raid controller.
The's another article where they grouped up 4 of those controllers and did 32 SATA drives together and got something over 1.1 GIGABYTE/second transfer rates. OMG lol. They had issues with windows limiting them to 2 TB per partition in NTFS ahhaahhahah.
So looks like you are right, the SATA raid scales pretty good. Probably cause I think each SATA drive has its own bus connection. So with 8 of them raided on a PCI-X card you are limited to the bus speed of PCI-X for 8 of them.
Originally posted by: Devistater
The tomshardware article I mentioned was on PCI-X which was on an intel motherboard, not the PCI express that most of the motherboards have now. As for the specific terminology for that interface, PCI-X is both the term that tomshardware uses and the term that the official manufacture's page says here: http://www.broadcom.com/produc....php?product_id=BC4852
Also according to the official standard site:http://www.pcisig.com/home
The official terminology is: "PCI Express?, PCI-X 2.0 and PCI 2.3"
Yes, RAIDing drives together does not in general make for better access time. Mostly nothing will improve access time except better hardware for example better hard drives.
Transfer rates do scale fairly well with SATA RAID setups according to the benchmarks. But as you noted, thats not the only thing involved. Thats one of the reasons why Raptors are so popular, because they are improved in pretty much every area, transfer rates, access times, etc. As for level loading being "not helped at all by increasing disk transfer rate" I disagree. It is helped to some degree, even if the level itself is 30 megs. I'm pretty sure there's a lot more than 30 megs worth of transfers that happens during a level load. Like sounds and textures, and other things are loaded as well as just the level. And I'm sure that level loading DOES depend greatly on the CPU as well. To what degree each one is important and which is more important, you'd have to run some tests to find out. All I know is that when I used to do a mirror raid setup on some new fast hard drives when my CPU was starting to be middle aged, I would always be the first to be loaded with a new level when the CS map changed. Now granted this was a while back when 45 gig hard drives were the thing. But it DID help improve my loading time. I had only changed the hard drive subsystem at that time when I spotted a good sale thanks to AT.
Originally posted by: user1234
It's a common misconception that raid-0 improves level loading time - according anandtech article AND maximum pc - raid does not help noticeably. They conducted tests with a bunch of real games (far cry, doom 3, etc) and compared the performance of single drive to dual raid-0 (using the same drive and system), and actual level loading time did not change much (less then 2% difference). Search for it if you don't believe it. With all due respect to your "scientific" "objective" impressions, the real tests show no difference. Also regarding level data size, there are very very few games whose levels are more than 100MB, and that would take only 2 seconds for a single average drive. So level loading time mostly depends on the cpu.