amirzaim
Member
Recently I came up with the idea of bringing RAID storage as the external drive for PS4 console and then I bought a special external HDD enclosure that allow user to set up the RAID disks from hardware level and I tried it out by putting both 500GB disks which came from PS3 and PS4 console respectively.
In order to set up these disks as RAID 0 setup, I have to look at the instruction manual on how to setup RAID 0 disk and then it worked initially when my PC detects RAID 0 disks as single 1TB storage. Then, I'm tried it out by connecting these drive with my PS4 slim console, it detects the drive and also formatted as the external drive for PS4. Why you have to trade-in your existing drive to bigger drive when you can just combine both disks as one big capacity drive?...
However, this method have its drawbacks as the hard drive failure risks is same as ordinary RAID 0 disks and you can't just simply put 2TB and higher capacity disks for RAID setup. This is because most of 2TB and higher capacity disks have something called Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) technology which allows more capacity but sacrificing write speed performance. Putting these disks for RAID setup will eventually fail and the worse thing is the write speed is just terribly slow.
In order to set up these disks as RAID 0 setup, I have to look at the instruction manual on how to setup RAID 0 disk and then it worked initially when my PC detects RAID 0 disks as single 1TB storage. Then, I'm tried it out by connecting these drive with my PS4 slim console, it detects the drive and also formatted as the external drive for PS4. Why you have to trade-in your existing drive to bigger drive when you can just combine both disks as one big capacity drive?...
However, this method have its drawbacks as the hard drive failure risks is same as ordinary RAID 0 disks and you can't just simply put 2TB and higher capacity disks for RAID setup. This is because most of 2TB and higher capacity disks have something called Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR) technology which allows more capacity but sacrificing write speed performance. Putting these disks for RAID setup will eventually fail and the worse thing is the write speed is just terribly slow.