The card keeps reporting bad sectors (BSL) on Disk 4. However, since I'm notified by email, I get emails saying that but it's always about 4 emails each time. It says error. Then error fixed. Then BSL logged. Then BSL cleared...lol. So it must not be sure. I'm tempted to replace the drive.
And the 16th drive that failed, I have it back in a WD My Book case right now (it originated in one) and it's formatting on my desktop. It's up to 80% so far. I have a feeling that the drive is fine. It would be nice to know why it was flagged as unusable and disconnected. I often wonder what if it got brilliant and started randomly disconnecting drives! It could easily destroy the array if it's algorithm for checking for failed drives malfunctioned!
I'm not very upset because now I may have this extra drive for backup. So now I'll have two 500GB drives to backup to.
Now I'm tempted to want to build a small 3-5 drive enclosure with some drives in RAID5 so I can have a single drive letter to backup to (and one device).
I called Promise to ask about the BSL issue and the individual I spoke with couldn't stop recommending I immediately add a spare drive. That really isn't possible, though! I'd have to backup the data and re-create the array. Besides, I'd lose 500GB. So this caused me to go on this crazy research kick to figure out what kind of costs I would incur to build a 24-drive system.
Lol. Wow. Prices multiply very quickly. Promise doesn't even make a 24-port card so I would be paying the higher premium for the other brands. For an Areca or 3ware card, it is about double the price of my 16-port card at around $1,400.
Plus, my 16-port case was $680. For 24-ports, the only good one I found has an included redundant PSU (no complaints!) but it was around $2,400! Three times the price! Oh, and 24 drives at $110 each, $2,700.
I knew I settled for 16-ports for a reason.
But at that point, I could, ideally, use RAID 6+ (my Promise card has it) so it would have a third parity disk plus probably two hot spares. This would mean a 2.5 TB addition in space with enhanced reliability and auto-correction features (spares).
Without the core computer components (mobo, cpu, memory, OS HDDs), I'm already $2K higher. I guess I just went for the sweet spot on price/capacity/redundancy. The case I got really was a good deal compared to many other ones. 16 hot swappable bays can be much more expensive than $680.