Oh that's reassuring :roll: That you've had to do it several times, I mean.Done it several times.
Two RAID 0 arrays backing each other is simillar to RAID 0+1. Reliability-wise, you would be far safer with RAID 1+0. It was wiser ten years ago and that hasn't changed nowadays. Not harder for the controller either. No additional wasted space compared to what you already do (50% waste).
What do you use for backups now?
IIRC, that's because Windows treats all USB drives as not having the option to have a MBR or GPT. eg they should only contain a single filesystem, like a floppy drive!Dynamic Disks is greyed out for USB 3.0.
Ignore this, as it appears to only work on Firewire connected drives and not USB drives... (Something in the USB stack prevents Windows from seeing USB drives as "fixed" drives, so disable the dynamic disk option. But with a quick regedit, you can tell the Windows Firewire stack to see all firewire drives as "fixed" disks therefore enabling dynamic disks with firewire devices).IIRC, that's because Windows treats all USB drives as not having the option to have a MBR or GPT. eg they should only contain a single filesystem, like a floppy drive!
If you use a 3rd party partitioning tool, just construct a GPT on the drive, but define no actual partitions. Get Windows to remount the drive, and hopefully the option should appear.