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Possibly OT... Hard Disk question
- dmcdona
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The PC is around 2001 vintage (HP Vectra) and has served me well. The processor and RAM is fine. I don't want to buy a new PC - just a couple of new hard disks. Trouble is, I'm not sure which ones I need.
The Computer Management console lists the two current hard disks as SCSI devices, but they're not. I'm fairly sure they are EIDE. The controller is an Intel 82801AA Ultra ATA. The two hard disks are IBM-DTLA-307030 and a WDC WD80-0BB-00CAA1.
On the web, I'm seeing IDE devices, EIDE devices, ATA100, ATA133, ATAII - you name it... So, if anyone can advise me on what I need, please let me know.
Thanks in advance and sorry if this is a little OT.
Dave
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- Seanie_Morris
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As for the physical HDD, go for Western Digital or Maxtor - both I have, the Maxtor double (two on a RAID 0 configuration), have been going solidly for over 2.5 years, and no problems. My back up for them is a Western Digital.
Seanie.
Midlands Astronomy Club.
Radio Presenter (Midlands 103), Space Enthusiast, Astronomy Outreach Co-ordinator.
Former IFAS Chairperson and Secretary.
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- dmcdona
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I was looking at WD Caviar disks... Two 250 gig disks for 210 euro - not bad I thought...
But I'd be interested in a raid configuration. How does that work? Is it inherent within the hard disk or do you need another piece of hardware or software to make it happen...? What does it cost? Will my PC be able to handle it?
Funnily enough, I was doing a job for Maxtor over the last few days. Pity there were no samples to take away...
Cheers
Dave
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- voyager
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You're not going to running applications off an external drive or using it for Virtual memory so speed is not such a big deal really. If you have a USB2 port then you're flying. If you have a firewire port, even better!
Being a techie and hence properly sceptical about the reliability of hard disks and properly protective of my Data I'm actaully going the paranoid route. The reason I got two identical external disks is that I'm going to be using one to store my data and the other as a backup of the first using rsync. But that is getting into paranoid teritory!
Anyhow, external disks are my advice. You can hook them up to any PC and even take them with you when you are meeting someone and when ever you do get a new PC you just plug it out of the old one and into the new one and you're away!
Hope that helps.
Bart.
My Home Page - www.bartbusschots.ie
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- voyager
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I looked at the portable units but portability is not on the priority list... So the additional cost is not worth it really...
I was looking at WD Caviar disks... Two 250 gig disks for 210 euro - not bad I thought...
But I'd be interested in a raid configuration. How does that work? Is it inherent within the hard disk or do you need another piece of hardware or software to make it happen...? What does it cost? Will my PC be able to handle it?
Funnily enough, I was doing a job for Maxtor over the last few days. Pity there were no samples to take away...
Cheers
Dave
Sorry, you posted this just as I was posting my last reply .... anyhow ... RAID!
I watned RAID too but came to the conclusion I couldn't afford it! You need a RAID controler to do RAID well, AKA a piece of hardware that sits between the HArd disks and your computer to present the disks as one disl to the computer and do all the funcky stuff behind the scenes for you. Unless your computer has a motherboard that was intended for a server it's un-likely to have a RAID controler.
There is such thing as software RAID but it is not reliable. I can tell you many many horror storries of total dataloss with software RAID _WITHOUT_ a disk failure. I was looking into it for a Mac at work and was told in no un-certain terms that it was a terrible idea!
Because I couldn't get a good RAID I dediced to 'simulate' RAID 1 (mirroring) with my two idenitcal disks and rsync.
Bart.
My Home Page - www.bartbusschots.ie
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- Seanie_Morris
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Still does not gurantee loss against data though. If your computer as a whole was hit with a massive power surge (lighting or other), then chances are everything in it will fry, hard drives and all - if the surge was to reach them.
Do the mirroring if you want - otherwise, go for the removable drive route (and it is still no ham to even have a back up of that one again too!).
Seanie.
Midlands Astronomy Club.
Radio Presenter (Midlands 103), Space Enthusiast, Astronomy Outreach Co-ordinator.
Former IFAS Chairperson and Secretary.
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