And what do you do if the controller, like in my case, silently "stutters" which meant that during a copy of all files to a bigger drive some blocks simply weren't written without error message of any kind, leaving me with 400 defective flac files which I noticed weeks later, when those defective files were written to backup already, of course?
Luckily there is some software (audiotester) to help finding those files with CRC Errors, else I wouldn't know today if I fixed all mess or not.
It's not that I'm new to computers, that why I learned the hard way over the years that in some cases enterprise grade is the better way to go.
I've been using RAID5 (but never motherboard RAID5) for five or six years now, and nothing of the sort has ever happened to me (actually, I just checked my Newegg history, and my first Promise RAID5 card was bought way back in 2002).
BUT... I agree with you completely (hat's why I said that before). That's why you need a robust backup strategy.
My setup has changed a bit since I wrote this (my RAID volume is bigger so I have a second "part" of the external drive system), but
this describes my setup and my backup strategy. That system would protect against an event like you described, so long as you noticed the error
before you swapped the drives (or they weren't all new files, and if so, the loss isn't as bad).
But what is the "handy dandy drive dock" that you refer to?
Described and linked in the thread above.
They now have a Duet USB3.0 model too.
Do any of you see any problems with my above mentioned strategy of just using the existing quad core HTPC for the media storage. It's presently in a fairly small Silverstone case. I could move the HTPC MOBO to the larger nicer Antec 300 case and just eliminate the whole WHS server PC.
Just a recommendation for the future long-term? I just recently moved my HTPC from a tower-style "regular" case to a
Lian-Li PC-34F case. I love it. And the Wife Acceptance Factor was eased by the "it'll look so much nicer in the living room" argument!
PS. While searching my Newegg history, I found where I bought those new HighPoint RAID cards. They were $99 each, but had a $25 rebate for each, so they were $148 total (assuming you eventually got the check, which I did). But I had a $50 Newegg gift card at the time from Christmas (awesome relative!!!) so it only actually cost me about $100 for both. So I was a little off before, but close enough for comfort. These aren't regular cheapo cards though, they are $137 each on Newegg right now. They do put them on awesome sales from time to time, though.
But, they weren't the $400-500 "enterprise" class cards in the same range with the same features. So, I wouldn't call them high-end. And, no, I don't completely trust them (but I wouldn't the enterprise ones either, I've sure seen plenty of supposed high-end "enterprise" class hardware flake out at the office)...
Trust, but verify.