Yes, a minimum of 2 identical drives.
It depends on which RAID level you want.
Follow this helpful link for full details on every RAID option :
http://www.acnc.com/04_00.html
Different levels offer more advantages.
Redundancy (to prevent data loss & corruption) as well as a much higher file access speed in multitasking environments are the primary advantages.
regards,
Philip T
2007-01-19 15:54:36
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answer #1
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answered by Philip T 7
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You need 2 of the same drives, plus an add-in card or a motherboard that supports raid. Add in cards from Promise technology are popular. You can raid 2 ATA or 2 SATA drives, depending upon the interface.
With 2 drives you have the choice of raid-0 or raid-1.
Raid 1 is disk shadowing, meaning that both drives are mirrors of each other. If one goes down, the other maintains the system. The added advantage is that data reading is optimized because there are twice as many heads under the data and the read can be accomplished faster.
Raid 0 is disk stripping, in which both physical drives are bound as one virtual disk volume. The disk cylinders are interleaved, meaning that each volume disk track combines the same tracks on each physical drive. There is no redundancy or protection here with 2 drives, all you get is a single volume that is the combined storage capacity of both drives. If you lose one drive, the entire volume is toast.
2007-01-19 16:05:59
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answer #2
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answered by charlyvvvvv 3
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it would want to do it immediately. It relies upon on the age of your equipment and once you've the most present day BIOS replace put in. In my case, I run a RAID 0 array w/250GB drives, a millionpersistent failed, I reinstalled the newpersistent yet mandatory to rebuild the entire array because of it being RAID 0. on your case it would want to properly be distinct.
2016-11-25 21:36:17
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answer #3
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answered by fuchser 4
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yes the drives need to be the same size.
there are different types of raid, but for the most part you get either speed, redundancy or increased capacity.
A quick summary of the most commonly used RAID levels:
RAID 0: Striped Set
RAID 1: Mirrored Set
RAID 3/4: Striped with Dedicated Parity
RAID 5: Striped Set with Distributed Parity
RAID 6: Striped Set with Dual Distributed Parity
2007-01-19 15:51:47
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answer #4
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answered by freetronics 5
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redundant_array_of_independent_disks
http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=830
2007-01-19 15:51:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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