Hi, PC.
Always assign a name, or label, to each volume (primary partition or logical
drive) on your HDDs. Disk Management lets us do this in the Properties
screen.
Like you, I have a 2-disk RAID 1 mirror plus 2 non-RAID drives, one Maxtor
and 3 Seagates, all SATA II. The RAID mirror is for my data volumes - sort
of an automatic backup, although my really important data is on a separate
backup outside the computer. This is my first RAID, so I don't know much
about them. Mine lets me know when the two mirrors don't match, a boot-up
message in RED tells me that the RAID is "degraded". At first I panicked at
this and replaced the brand-new "bad" second drive, but then I learned that
the error message disappears on its own after the RAID has had time to
rebuild and resynchronize the mirror.
Since I do some beta testing, several volumes hold different versions or
builds of WinXP, Vista and Win7, and I often delete a volume and reformat it
for a new OS. (My nice orderly first C:, then D:, then E:... pattern got
hopelessly scrambled years ago.) But "Win7x64" always has the same name,
even if I one OS sees it as Drive F: and another as Drive X:, or if those
letters change tomorrow. I don't know if it matters which SATA port is used
for which HDD.
My 2-year-old mobo is an EPoX MF570sli, and has 6 onboard SATA II ports,
plus a couple of so-far-unused eSATA. EPoX has since gone out of business,
but this is my 3rd EPoX mobo and it is still performing very well. Its
onboard NVIDIA nForce RAID controller is what I'm using.
RC
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