EVGA Z390 FTW User Manual page 53

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EVGA Z390 FTW (123-CS-E397)
The array depictions below show how this issue scales to larger arrays. In fact, due to
the lack of fault tolerance, the potential failure rate actually increases because of the
addition of more drives that can physically fail.
RAID 0 (4 Drive)
P-DRIVE1
P-DRIVE2
P-DRIVE3
DATA-A
DATA-B
DATA-C
DATA-ABCD
P-DRIVE1
P-DRIVE2
P-DRIVE3
DATA-A
DATA-B
DATA-C
DATA-ABCD
P-DRIVE1
P-DRIVE2
P-DRIVE3
DATA-A
DATA-B
DATA-C
DATA-ABCD
RAID1
: This type of array is referred to as "Mirroring" or a "Mirrored Array."
RAID1 uses two (2) physical drives and writes ALL data to both drives simultaneously
providing a 1 to 1 mirror, giving you 100% redundancy live. So as data is being written,
if a drive fails you are still up and running. In most cases, when a failure occurs you will
experience a stutter in performance and a small but noticeable slow down. Next, you'll
likely see a popup warning from IRST alerting you that a drive has failed or is
disconnected, and your array's status has been changed to "Degraded".
RAID1 (at least on these PCH driven controllers) are limited to 2 drives. Also being
that this is a mirror, you will use 50% of your capacity in redundancy.
P-DRIVE4
P-DRIVE1
DATA-D
DATA-A
P-DRIVE4
P-DRIVE1
DATA-D
DATA-A
P-DRIVE4
DATA-D
L-DRIVE = ≃ 4TB
P-DRIVE2
P-DRIVE3
P-DRIVE4
DATA-B
DATA-C
DATA-D
DATA-ABCD
P-DRIVE2
P-DRIVE3
P-DRIVE4
DATA-B
DATA-C
DATA-D
DATA-ABCD
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