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webgeeze Rated PG
Joined: 23 Nov 2005 Posts: 1 Location: Surrey
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Posted: Wed, 23 Nov 2005 08:38:33 Post Subject: Two Hard Drives & Cache Issue |
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Hi
I'm looking for advise from the techies amongst you, please
I am running a Rimage 2000i robotic CD duplicator and printer unit which requires a certain spec PC.
We have noticed recently, a problem where audio discs copied via the system incur an interferrence problem or crackle. We have investigated the drives concerned (plextor pro) and they seem to be fine.
The manufacturer reckons, we need a PC running two Hard Drives. They commented as follows;
"It doesn’t need mirroring, it will just use the second hard disk for caching"
My question is this. If a second drive is added as a slave to the first, is the cache handled automatically by the host PC or is it something which needs configuring?
Out of interest, what is the technical effect/benefit in respect of cache, by running two drives in one PC?
thankyou in advance of any input you can provide.
justin _________________ CD Business Card & Shape Media specialist including the Vinyl Style CD-R range which we supply, custom print and duplicate. |
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Little Bruin
Boo Boo
Joined: 07 Apr 2003
Posts: 667
Location: Pic-A-Nic Basket |
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Doctor Feelgood Arrrrghh!
Joined: 07 Apr 2003 Posts: 20349 Location: New Jersey
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Posted: Wed, 23 Nov 2005 09:44:32 Post Subject: |
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Hi webgeeze, and welcome!
I am unfamiliar with your program, but in general there should be a setting to tell it where to go for cache, temporary disk space, or whatever it might call it. Some programs will look to see what disk it thinks it should use, but it doesn't always pick the one you want (I have a TV tuner/capturer like that).
Having a second disk will help the performance of the system, and may eliminate the crackling by allowing the disks to keep up with the burning. With one disk the operating system, the burning application, temporary cache data, and whatever else may be running are all trying to access the one disk and they have to wait their turn. With two disks, preferably on separate drive channels, some of the tasks can be distributed and makes things run smoother. If you have two disks on one drive channel the benefits aren't as great since the controller is trying to access both drives on one cable, which is also a limiting factor.
Are these IDE drives? SATA generally has one drive per channel, so that eliminates that concern. |
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BeerCheeze *hick*
Joined: 14 Jun 2003 Posts: 9285 Location: At the Bar
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