I read somebody’s coming out with a PCIe controller that can handle 1200 MB/s sustained transfer speeds. Now try and figure how to saturate that with our CAV hard drives where the more drives you add, the larger the range between mininium and maximum transfer speeds grows. Sure, these SAS drives might get up to 90 MB/s on the high end, but what’s the low end? If you want 1200 MB/s sustained speeds then you have to design the array using that low end value, which sort of sucks. I think it works out to be be like 20 drives for 1200 MB/s vs about 12 drives to reach that on the outside tracks of the disks. So you either settle for 75% of 1200 as the average with 12 drives, or you have to push 8 extra drives and waste all that speed off the top.
But what if we did an opositional RAID 0 where you build the array in pairs that transfer from opposite sides of the disk-inside on one and outside on the other; in this way we get a virtual CLV drive performance where speeds are constant at the median value, between the high and low speeds. I’m using 60 MB/s and 90 MB/s for that, so 150 MB/s(2x75) flat would be the theoretical on an oppositional raid 0 pair. That means you could saturate your 1200 MB/s controller with 16 drives.
That makes more sense to me than an actual CLV drive because CLV drives attain a constant speed by slowing the media down as the heads move to the longer, outside tracks. Slowing the media down? How about pulling your head out of your bum? That’s a little aside to caca roaches over at the blu-ray and hd dvd associations’ golf course. Everyone knows that those 2x transfer speeds are half that of 18x DVD, right? They had to slow the media RPM down by a factor of 15 to get transfers that slow, but think of all the ‘new’ products they can release as they continue to ‘improve’(4x, 6x, 8x, 10x, hybrid CAV). They could roll out ‘new’ products for the next ten years. What I’d like to see is Optical RAID 0 using red lazer, regular DVD drives. I bet if we saw that as an option on Voodoo or botique systems then blu-ray and hd dvd would suddenly realize they can spin their media faster. Maybe the new HD optical format is RAID 0 regular DVD, dual DVD discs for movies that play on any RAID 0 optical RAID with 12 disc arrays on high end systems? Since when did speed stop mattering? When the blu-ray and hd dvd ad money started coming in? Tom? Anyone?