alt said:I'm getting a server case, and I'm installing all ide devices into the 6 bays.
What is the best method of adding devices to the bays beyond the normal 4 ide limit. Thanks for your expertise.
-alt
Handruin said:Alt -
Could you please be more specific and define what you mean by best? Are you asking about HBA adaptors? If so, I would agree with Mercutio.
alt said:Yes Handruin, I'm refering to HBA adaptors. THANKS for giving me your advise, instead of getting greif from the snobish little click that seems to have festered here.
Cliptin said:If you can wait a little bit longer, you will be able to use the adaptec SATA card with 7 ports. I saw it somewhere but can't find it now.
3ware cards also come in 8 port versions.
CougTek said:Without knowing at all how many hard drives / optical drives you'll have within your 6 IDE drives total, I would advise you to connect the optical drives to the onboard ATA controller of the south bridge and to connect your hard drives to the PCI ATA controller.
CougTek said:I would put the two CD writers and the Zip drive on the south bridge and the hard drives on the HBA.
Buck said:CougTek said:I would put the two CD writers and the Zip drive on the south bridge and the hard drives on the HBA.
I second Coug's suggestion.
I would not wait for SATA, as their release will not be very soon, and upon their release, there will be no performance benefit.
Buck said:CougTek said:I would put the two CD writers and the Zip drive on the south bridge and the hard drives on the HBA.
I second Coug's suggestion.
I would not wait for SATA, as their release will not be very soon, and upon their release, there will be no performance benefit.
alt said:CougTek said:Without knowing at all how many hard drives / optical drives you'll have within your 6 IDE drives total, I would advise you to connect the optical drives to the onboard ATA controller of the south bridge and to connect your hard drives to the PCI ATA controller.
CougTek:
Here's what's in it. 3-removable 7200rpm ata100 hdd's, 2-cd burners, 1- zip drive. Would you still go with your previous advise? Thanks much for your help.
Buck said:... there will be no performance benefit.
Buck said:When Serial ATA is released, the drive and Host will both use Parallel ATA internally. The Parallel ATA data will be converted through a conversion chip and sent in packet form across the serial cable. This will then need to be converted back to Parallel ATA. Additionally, the drives will still use the same media to buffer bit rate as their Parallel brethren of the day. So, the performance benefits will not come until high media to buffer transfers can be accomplished.
alt said:...Here's what's in it. 3-removable 7200rpm ata100 hdd's, 2-cd burners, 1- zip drive...
Platform said:
alt said:...Here's what's in it. 3-removable 7200rpm ata100 hdd's, 2-cd burners, 1- zip drive...
If this was 2003 -- maybe mid-2003 or late-2003 -- a deluxe Intel-based chipset SATA mobo would (supposedly) have 6-each SATA ports, meaning you would max-out your deluxe Intel-based chipset with the above number of components. If you had an "economy" SATA mobo, you would only have 4-each SATA ports.
alt said:Do you think a onboard 2 ide controller mobo is the best solution for the above configuation, or should I just get a regular mobo and add a Promise controller?
alt said:Platform,
Do you think a onboard 2 ide controller mobo is the best solution for the above configuation, or should I just get a regular mobo and add a Promise controller?
Platform said:
alt said:Platform,
Do you think a onboard 2 ide controller mobo is the best solution for the above configuation, or should I just get a regular mobo and add a Promise controller?
You're talking about a typical 2 IDE Channel mobo (i.e. -- pretty much a typical mobo), correct?
alt said:Do you think a onboard 2 ide controller mobo is the best solution for the above configuation, or should I just get a regular mobo and add a Promise controller?
alt said:Let me make sure were talking about the same thing. What I meant by-2 ide controller mobo- is a mobo with 2 onboard ide controllers,which would therefore allow up to 8 (4+4) devices. I thought it would be more stable than useing a regular mobo and adding a Promise controller to get the total 8 channels.What do you think?
alt said:Let me make sure were talking about the same thing. What I meant by-2 ide controller mobo- is a mobo with 2 onboard ide controllers,which would therefore allow up to 8 (4+4) devices. I thought it would be more stable than useing a regular mobo and adding a Promise controller to get the total 8 channels.What do you think?
Cliptin said:...Until recently motherboards came with 2 controllers on board. More recently, motherboards come with an additional RAID controller(s) which can be used in a non-RAID mode and increases the number of controllers.