I'm having issues with RAID. I have an X58A-UD3R Rev1.0 and I was running 2 Seagate 1Tbs for about 6 months in RAID 0 without any problems. I recently got my 4th hdd (I had the 3rd one plugged in and recognised but not installed to i.e. not used)... anyway... the idea was to go from RAID 0 to RAID 10 (0+1) I think it was. The problem is that I was constantly dropping a drive with this configuration and had to rebuild the array on a daily basis using the intel utility. When I say constantly, I mean almost every single time that I started the computer, 1 of the drives would be red... (so no data was being lost obviously but it was still a nuisance having to rebuild the array so often - sometimes 2ce a day and at 7-10 hours rebuild time, my computer was on pretty much 24/7). Anyway, the issue gets worse... every once in a while, it drops 2 drives which renders the array useless and a system reinstal is required. (well, it always dropped 2 drives from the same group). At first I thought it might be something to do with my HDDs i.e. they may be faulty because it kept dropping the same two drives, but then it started dropping the other 2 so I'm thinking that that can't be the issue. I RMA'd the board for a different reason and just got it back yesterday and today, on my 3rd start of the computer or so, I got my first drive dropping, only this time it was the double drop which means I'm in the process of reinstalling the whole system again.
So that's a bit of background on my situation... now the questions:
1.) Dark Mantis told me that RAID 10 is just a really bad RAID configuraiton on home based computer because the X58 chip or whatever chip controls the RAID configuration is just not up to scratch for us small time users on these home based computers. I did an update to the BIOS to F6 hoping it would somehow solve the stability issues but I can say that the issues have not been solved as I've just mentioned. So, should I just forget about RAID 10? or is their another potential problem elsewhere?
2.) Considering there is a limit of 2TB for my chipset for RAID 5 configuraitons, could limiting the RAID 10 configuration to 2TB solve issue? I know this is a long shot considering the fact that when I create a RAID 5 or 0 configuration with my 4 1TB i.e. 4TB worth of space HDD's, the partition is claimed to be non bootable but when I reduce the allocated space to 2TB, they become bootable however the RAID 10 configuration is bootable at 2.8TB or whatever it allocated for the RAID 10 out of my 4 HDD's.
3.) Would using 4HDD's in RAID 0 configuration stumble me on the same controller problems/issues/inadequacies as those apparently seen with the RAID 10 configuration?