Good luck getting a 5870, it is on my shopping list too but just about everywhere I look is only taking pre-orders with a minimum of a month's wait.
Mike.

Paul
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Good luck getting a 5870, it is on my shopping list too but just about everywhere I look is only taking pre-orders with a minimum of a month's wait.
Mike.
I can just repeat: from my point of view there is no difference in fail of simply connected single drive and drive connected in RAID0, only mathematical probability of fail should be 2x higher, but it is more than well balanced by performance of such RAID, which is very necessary for any still-almost-the-same-graphic-engine-Trainz fan playing it under 1600x1200 and higher resolution going to load some well done larger map with a lot of up to date assets used.Hi David,
The failure rate is much better than it was for hard drives, but the really cheap SATA drives still have a higher failure rate than the older SCSI drives. I don't know why other than cheaper manufacturing processes. All in all I still wouldn't use a RAID0 even for my personal data since there's still the risk of sending it all to bit heaven.
The fact that the other RAID configurations require more hardware, also makes me shy away from them for personal systems. Why waste the extra power, and hard drives for a RAID, particularly when there's a drop in performance with the mirroring operation and parity checking.
If this was a corporate datacenter, with plenty of money and plenty of backup capabilities, sure I would consider RAIDs. They have the money to replace drives when they fail, and the backup capabilities to handle the large arrays they can become.
John
I can just repeat: from my point of view there is no difference in fail of simply connected single drive and drive connected in RAID0, only mathematical probability of fail should be 2x higher, but it is more than well balanced by performance of such RAID, which is very necessary for any still-almost-the-same-graphic-engine-Trainz fan playing it under 1600x1200 and higher resolution going to load some well done larger map with a lot of up to date assets used.
I agree with your last setence and wonder if it applies to SSD-drives aswell, quite expensive if it does.
Just curious, "3 years on average" says who ?? I read a summary of Google's experiences with different drives and there, they last much longer on average.
So if we expect a hard drive crash every 3 years on average.....
....Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks
Cheers David
:hehe: very good!