I recently started reading posts about write-back caching and some of the pro's and con's. When you enable it, there is this scary error message that says the world will explode if i lose power.
I have tried it both ways (enabled/disabled) and enabled on benchmarks certainly is substantially faster.
I use my raid 0 (dual gen 2 74 gig raptors in raid 0) solely for my OS and the two games I play. never is there anything important stored on this drive and if it failed.. so be it.
The flip side is that I also don't want to reformat frequently due to OS corruption because I'm amazingly lazy.
I'm on an UPS currently but it doesn't shut down the computer automatically.. i still have to be home.
So my question here is, how frequently does the OS write important information that if lost would be unrecoverable and corrupt my win7 x64 install?
I overclock my i7 930 to 4.2 right now and am pushing it further day by day.. but occasionally I get a BSOD or a freeze-up when I'm pushing it with trail and error.
I have tried it both ways (enabled/disabled) and enabled on benchmarks certainly is substantially faster.
I use my raid 0 (dual gen 2 74 gig raptors in raid 0) solely for my OS and the two games I play. never is there anything important stored on this drive and if it failed.. so be it.
The flip side is that I also don't want to reformat frequently due to OS corruption because I'm amazingly lazy.
I'm on an UPS currently but it doesn't shut down the computer automatically.. i still have to be home.
So my question here is, how frequently does the OS write important information that if lost would be unrecoverable and corrupt my win7 x64 install?
I overclock my i7 930 to 4.2 right now and am pushing it further day by day.. but occasionally I get a BSOD or a freeze-up when I'm pushing it with trail and error.