I said it once ,....I'll say it again........but this time with a quote out of a link for those interested in 3TB+ support
However, there still may be an issue you have to deal with: Not all applications can handle GPT, even on 64-bit systems. As a result, Western Digital has supplied a workaround: a HighPoint Rocket 620 internal half-height SATA card, which it ships with the 3TB drive. The card has two SATA 6 ports and handles the emulation, if needed, to allow software to work with the larger 3TB hard drive. And here's the artical I pulled it off with due credits!...
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:qi8d9Pa13qoJ:review.techworld.com/storage/3258087/western-digital-3tb-caviar-green-hd-review/+3TB+drives+highpoint+640&cd=5&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk&source=www.google.co.uk And for my two bob's worth!
Yet again where at the cross roads of one area of computers, that......... has jumped ahead substantially........even Intel is struggling to keep up with multipul TB drives and there support in system.
In the mean time, alternatives will have to be used if we want to take advantage of monster storage ..........PCI-E based SATA cards , IBIS ans NAS are just three that have work a rounds , currently and about to be released.
QNAP (NAS) have just had a firmware version release to tackle this very problem of 3TB+ support
I purchased the HighPoint RocketRaid 640 PCI-E card for several reasons.......seeing the storm clouds brewing for over 2TB HDD support was one.
Why the 640 over the cheaper 620.......performance! The 640 has 4 SATAIII ports against 2.......... and 2 controllers against 1 on the 620.
So connecting up 2 or 4 drives on the 640 has a much higher overhead (through put overheads that is).........presently I have 4 Samsung Spinpoints F3 (203HJ) in raid0 for a photo storage drive and get 540Mb/s read/write...........and "Yes" these are sataII drives.......bang for buck! .... these drives are under £30 a pop!
Part two question! ..... Raid1 allows you to suffer a drive failure and pop in a replacement, it will then go on it's merry way and rebuild to the new drive (this is the short,short version) this is where the parity come from .... do more then this .....well there is several paths , all differing in cost and complexity.
To cover this situation and several other possibles, ... I use "Acronis True image Home 2011 with the "Plus Pack" add on .... the add on allows me to clone a complete Hard drive to a "
dissimilar or similar hardware configuration"
So in your predicament I can clone a logical drive to another physical drive.... even in the same or different machine , I can even add F6 drivers after the format just prior to the actual cloning process..... very cool feature!
this is just one method of many .... I'm sure other people can weigh in with some free app knowledge to gain the some or similar result
Aussie Allan