E Everendless In Runtime Messages 104 Sep 5, 2010 #1 Sounds like a dumb question, and i'm guessing you can't. But I might as well ask.
R Remeniz Fully Optimized Messages 3,390 Location England Sep 5, 2010 #2 Everendless said: Sounds like a dumb question, and i'm guessing you can't. But I might as well ask. Click to expand... You can but why you'd want to do it is a different question. Unless it's purely for benchmarking. EDIT: I just re-read the title - 2 SSD and 1 HDD in raid 0?
Everendless said: Sounds like a dumb question, and i'm guessing you can't. But I might as well ask. Click to expand... You can but why you'd want to do it is a different question. Unless it's purely for benchmarking. EDIT: I just re-read the title - 2 SSD and 1 HDD in raid 0?
J J03 ~~~~~~~~ Messages 5,558 Location Wales Sep 5, 2010 #3 Yes, you can. However... if you had 3 different size disks, the overall size of the raid array would be 3*(size of smallest disk).
Yes, you can. However... if you had 3 different size disks, the overall size of the raid array would be 3*(size of smallest disk).
iPwn ..m.0,0.m.., Messages 3,999 Location ::1 Sep 5, 2010 #4 Also, you would get better performance from just the two SSD's in Raid without adding the mechanical HD.
Also, you would get better performance from just the two SSD's in Raid without adding the mechanical HD.
Indigo Fully Optimized Messages 1,866 Location USA Sep 8, 2010 #6 and unfortunately putting SSD's into RAID 0 isn't possible right now anyway. Read Maximum PC's latest Dream Machine issue for the reason why. One SSD is plenty fast right now, as long as you don't buy a mainstream or budget SSD drive.
and unfortunately putting SSD's into RAID 0 isn't possible right now anyway. Read Maximum PC's latest Dream Machine issue for the reason why. One SSD is plenty fast right now, as long as you don't buy a mainstream or budget SSD drive.