![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Hi guys,
I have an Intel RAID array on my PC with 3 750Gb physical drives. I have checked all the connections in the box and all seems well. The error I receive is that the RAID array is degraded ("missing hard drive" error) on port 1. Ports 0 and 2 are fine representing the other 2 drives. This happened once before and apparently the cause was iTunes mpeg files play havoc with RAID arrays so I've deleted anything that uses iTunes including the application. No matter what I do I can't get this RAID to rebuild itself. The Intel software gives me no options to change anything ("No actions availabe"). The PC is constantly churning without any instruction for it to do something and the performance is woeful despite being a Core 2 Quad processor, 4Gb memory- would this be due to the degraded array? Also on a separate note, my D drive has disappeared - this is the DVD player. I checked the connections on that and they seemed fine also. Wondering if this is somehow related. Any ideas - I"m new to arrays |
|
|||
|
Backup your data. Verify all of your drives. A degraded array means you lost a drive. The drive on port 1 has failed. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) |
|
|||
|
When this problem happened before, I sent the PC back to the vendor for
warranty attention. You may suggest doing this again although I hesitate because I'm in Melbourne, support given in Sydney, couriers involved etc - it's not worth the trouble.They fixed it and confirmed that the hard drive was not faulty and believed them because the RAID volume was fine with all 3 discs identified. Now that it's happened again, I'm just about pulling my hair out. I've never dealt with RAID technology before and given the grief it is causing, I fail to see the advantage it offers. "SCSIraidGURU" wrote: Backup your data. Verify all of your drives. A degraded array means you lost a drive. The drive on port 1 has failed. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) |
|
|||
|
Is there any possibility of it being anything else other than replacing the
hard drive. If I do replace the hard drive, do they all have to be the same size or can I go more. Thinking of a 1 Tb HDD (Seagate) and have 750Gb HDD x 2. Can this arrangement of 3 drives work in an array. "SCSIraidGURU" wrote: Backup your data. Verify all of your drives. A degraded array means you lost a drive. The drive on port 1 has failed. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) |
|
|||
|
You fail to mention the type of raid array, ie mirror, stripped or? which is
kinda important when replacing a drive, ie in some types of array only the size of the smallest HD is utilised, so adding a larger disk the excess capacity isnt used/visible to win Its also possible that a degraded/iffy pwr supply can cause array/hd problems. Personnally I have some reservations regarding on board raid, you only have to check the price for a dedicated hardware raid card and find that they cost in the order of 3 times as much of a motherboard with onboard raid "markmcd" wrote in message ... Is there any possibility of it being anything else other than replacing the hard drive. If I do replace the hard drive, do they all have to be the same size or can I go more. Thinking of a 1 Tb HDD (Seagate) and have 750Gb HDD x 2. Can this arrangement of 3 drives work in an array. "SCSIraidGURU" wrote: Backup your data. Verify all of your drives. A degraded array means you lost a drive. The drive on port 1 has failed. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) |