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#1
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D875PBZ & RAID 0
I haven't quite seen this issue addressed in my Google search and hope
someone can give me some clues. I've finally built my own computer around the Intel D875PBZ motherboard and have two Western Digital Raptor SATA drives (36.7 GB each) in a RAID 0 (128 kB, striped) array plugged directly into the motherboard. Intel Application Accelerator RAID edition v3.5. Intel BIOS P18. Also have a 120 GB Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 9 for data storage running as master on the primary IDE controller. It runs UDMA Mode 5. Don't laugh, but about the only thing I have to test drive speed is EZ CD Creator. EZCD has this System Test tool that says it tests the read speed of system drives. It shows the following: Maxtor - 54 MB/sec read rate. Raptor - 48 MB/sec read rate. I would have thought that the RAID'ed Raptors would come in significantly higher than the Maxtor. Am I expecting too much from the array? Is there a better performance test tool I could use? Thanks for any comments. Lance ***** |
#2
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Lance wrote:
I haven't quite seen this issue addressed in my Google search and hope someone can give me some clues. I've finally built my own computer around the Intel D875PBZ motherboard and have two Western Digital Raptor SATA drives (36.7 GB each) in a RAID 0 (128 kB, striped) array plugged directly into the motherboard. Intel Application Accelerator RAID edition v3.5. Intel BIOS P18. Sorry, forgot some other information: No obvious errors in Device Manager, IAA, WinXP event log. WinXP SP1a with all updates 2x256MB matched DDR400 2.6 GHz P4 w/ HT |
#3
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Lance wrote:
I haven't quite seen this issue addressed in my Google search and hope someone can give me some clues. I've finally built my own computer around the Intel D875PBZ motherboard and have two Western Digital Raptor SATA drives (WD360GD, 36.7 GB each) in a RAID 0 (128 kB, striped) array plugged directly into the motherboard. Intel Application Accelerator RAID edition v3.5. Intel BIOS P18. Also have a 120 GB Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 9 (6Y120P0) for data storage running as master on the primary IDE controller. It runs UDMA Mode 5. Don't laugh, but about the only thing I have to test drive speed is EZ CD Creator. EZCD has this System Test tool that says it tests the read speed of system drives. It shows the following: Maxtor - 54 MB/sec read rate. Raptor - 48 MB/sec read rate. I would have thought that the RAID'ed Raptors would come in significantly higher than the Maxtor. Am I expecting too much from the array? Is there a better performance test tool I could use? OK, I'm going to answer my own question. The EZCD Creator System Test isn't accurate for my purpose. I wound up using HD_Speed from http://www.steelbytes.com/. This utility simply reads or writes various sized blocks of data to or from the hard disk and calculates a data transfer rate. Block size can be "Auto" or user selectable from 4kB to 16MB. There is also an option for testing "burst rate" which I assume takes advantage of the disk buffer. The read data rate for the UDMA 5 drive starts out at 30MB/sec @ 4kB block size, then increases to 57 MB/sec @ 16kB block and remains constant for bigger block sizes. Burst rate peaks at around 89 MB/sec @ 128 kB block size. Similarly, the RAID 0 SATA drives start out at 34MB/sec @ 4kB block size, then increases to 110 MB/sec @ 128kB block size and remains constant for bigger block sizes. Burst rate peaks at around 194 MB/sec at block sizes of 256kB and 512kB. So my RAID'ed SATA drives are indeed faster than my UDMA 5 drive, but the difference isn't very much at block sizes less than 16kB. For blocks sizes greater than 128kB, the RAID'ed SATA drives are about double the speed of UDMA 5. All in all, I'm pleased as punch. My major need for speed comes from editing photos and video so these characteristics are perfect for my needs. Lance ***** |
#4
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"Lance" wrote in message link.net... Lance wrote: So my RAID'ed SATA drives are indeed faster than my UDMA 5 drive, but the difference isn't very much at block sizes less than 16kB. For blocks sizes greater than 128kB, the RAID'ed SATA drives are about double the speed of UDMA 5. All in all, I'm pleased as punch. My major need for speed comes from editing photos and video so these characteristics are perfect for my needs. I had a similar decision when I set up my system. I too capture AVI's from a DV camera and do editing and DVD authoring. I chose to stay with non-RAID configuration because of concerns about backing up OS and data. Ghost does not support RAID. The non-RAID transfers are fast enough to accommodate captures, which is where disk throughput becomes critical (otherwise we'll get dropped frames). For rendering and authoring, CPU becomes the rate-limiting step. With my P4 3 GHz I get 40-55 frames/s rendering, which is fine by me. -- Aloke ---- to reply by e-mail remove 123 and change invalid to com |
#5
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Aloke Prasad wrote:
"Lance" wrote in message link.net... Lance wrote: So my RAID'ed SATA drives are indeed faster than my UDMA 5 drive, but the difference isn't very much at block sizes less than 16kB. For blocks sizes greater than 128kB, the RAID'ed SATA drives are about double the speed of UDMA 5. All in all, I'm pleased as punch. My major need for speed comes from editing photos and video so these characteristics are perfect for my needs. I had a similar decision when I set up my system. I too capture AVI's from a DV camera and do editing and DVD authoring. I chose to stay with non-RAID configuration because of concerns about backing up OS and data. Ghost does not support RAID. The non-RAID transfers are fast enough to accommodate captures, which is where disk throughput becomes critical (otherwise we'll get dropped frames). For rendering and authoring, CPU becomes the rate-limiting step. With my P4 3 GHz I get 40-55 frames/s rendering, which is fine by me. Sigh, a 3GHz would've blown my budget, so I got a 2.6 GHz instead. But for my personal use, I don't think I'll ever buy a Dell/HP/etc again. Building your own is the way to go. Lance ***** |
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