AnotherHiggins
Technical User
I recently bought two 2TB internal HDDs to replace a couple of aging 500GB drives. It's hard to believe that what I'm trying to do is uncommon, but nearly all of the results I find in Google deal with trying to add the an existing non-RAIDed boot drive into a RAID without wiping the boot drive.
So, to be clear: I do NOT want to mess with the HDD that Windows is installed on. I know that putting that HDD into a RAID would require reformatting the drive, but, again, that's not what I'm after. I just want to add RAID storage using two brand new drives.
I want to install the two drives in my tower and use a hardware RAID to mirror them for redundancy. They'll just be used for media - mostly pictures and music. (I know that mirroring != backup. I'm also probably going to wind up using Mozy for online [readffsite] backup, but I would like to have the redundancy for the sake of convenience should one drive die).
Specs:
Windows 7 Home Premium
Existing boot drive (that I won't be messing with): Western Digital Caviar Black 640GB
Drives for RAID: 2x Samsung Spinpoint F4 2TB
MoBo: Gigabyte GA-MA790XT-UD4P (link to product page)
Processor: AMD Phenom II X4 940 Black (Quad core non-OC'ed @ 3GHz)
My MoBo has two SATA controllers. My OS HDD & existing 500GB HDDs are on one controller, and I want to put the new HDDs in a RAID on the secondary controller.
I've downloaded the GSATA drivers from Gigabyte's website. I've configured a mirrored RAID 1 in my BIOS and it shows up during the bootup.But once I'm in Windows I can't figure out how to set up the RAID. In My Computer > Manager > Disk Management, it shows both of the disks but if I right click on either one it only shows me options to set up a software RAID. I would just do that except mirroring isn't an option for software RAID on Home Premium. I've tried updating the driver, but it says that the driver is already up to date.
So, does anyone have any ideas what else I can try?
Secondary question: I've considered just throwing the new drives into an old tower I have laying around and building a media server, but I have no experience with that sort of thing. How cheaply could I realistically do that for given that I'd have to buy a new mother board and processor?
[tt][blue]-John[/blue][/tt]
[tab][red]The plural of anecdote is not data[/red]
Help us help you. Please read FAQ 181-2886 before posting.
So, to be clear: I do NOT want to mess with the HDD that Windows is installed on. I know that putting that HDD into a RAID would require reformatting the drive, but, again, that's not what I'm after. I just want to add RAID storage using two brand new drives.
I want to install the two drives in my tower and use a hardware RAID to mirror them for redundancy. They'll just be used for media - mostly pictures and music. (I know that mirroring != backup. I'm also probably going to wind up using Mozy for online [readffsite] backup, but I would like to have the redundancy for the sake of convenience should one drive die).
Specs:
Windows 7 Home Premium
Existing boot drive (that I won't be messing with): Western Digital Caviar Black 640GB
Drives for RAID: 2x Samsung Spinpoint F4 2TB
MoBo: Gigabyte GA-MA790XT-UD4P (link to product page)
Processor: AMD Phenom II X4 940 Black (Quad core non-OC'ed @ 3GHz)
My MoBo has two SATA controllers. My OS HDD & existing 500GB HDDs are on one controller, and I want to put the new HDDs in a RAID on the secondary controller.
I've downloaded the GSATA drivers from Gigabyte's website. I've configured a mirrored RAID 1 in my BIOS and it shows up during the bootup.But once I'm in Windows I can't figure out how to set up the RAID. In My Computer > Manager > Disk Management, it shows both of the disks but if I right click on either one it only shows me options to set up a software RAID. I would just do that except mirroring isn't an option for software RAID on Home Premium. I've tried updating the driver, but it says that the driver is already up to date.
So, does anyone have any ideas what else I can try?
Secondary question: I've considered just throwing the new drives into an old tower I have laying around and building a media server, but I have no experience with that sort of thing. How cheaply could I realistically do that for given that I'd have to buy a new mother board and processor?
[tt][blue]-John[/blue][/tt]
[tab][red]The plural of anecdote is not data[/red]
Help us help you. Please read FAQ 181-2886 before posting.