woodson75 Distinguished Feb 5, 2013 847 12 20,015 Jan 20, 2015 #1 Say I had a machine with two SSDs (for OS and a few other programmes) and two HDDs (for mass data) in one PC, would it be possible to create two RAID 1 arrays for each of these pairs of discs?
Say I had a machine with two SSDs (for OS and a few other programmes) and two HDDs (for mass data) in one PC, would it be possible to create two RAID 1 arrays for each of these pairs of discs?
Solution digitaldoc Jan 20, 2015 Yes, as long as you had enough SATA ports, and your motherboard supported this.
digitaldoc Expert Ambassador Oct 31, 2003 5,213 0 36,960 Jan 20, 2015 Solution #2 Yes, as long as you had enough SATA ports, and your motherboard supported this. Upvote 0 Downvote Solution
someguynamedmatt Distinguished Feb 7, 2010 1,551 0 20,160 Jan 20, 2015 #3 ^ Yep - as long as your motherboard/RAID controller supports having multiple independent arrays, this shouldn't be a problem. Upvote 0 Downvote
^ Yep - as long as your motherboard/RAID controller supports having multiple independent arrays, this shouldn't be a problem.
woodson75 Distinguished Feb 5, 2013 847 12 20,015 Jan 20, 2015 #4 Would the ASUS H97M PLUS support independent multiple arrays? There's nothing in the specs to say so http://www.asus.com/nz/Motherboards/H97MPLUS/specifications/ Upvote 0 Downvote
Would the ASUS H97M PLUS support independent multiple arrays? There's nothing in the specs to say so http://www.asus.com/nz/Motherboards/H97MPLUS/specifications/