It won't matter; just get the connector spec and gender correct, and you'll be good to go (use what I linked as a guideline, as it has pics of both ends, including the correct gender).Will either of these two molex power cables work? One of them says its only for sata 1 or 2 drives, not sata 3. I'm trying to order most of it from one place, newegg. Is there a specific SATA 3 power cable I need to buy?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ..._to_4-pin_Molex_(Male)-_-12-816-038-_-Product
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ..._to_4-pin_Molex_(Male)-_-12-186-043-_-Product
The first thing you should do, is make a backup of any critical data, just in case something goes wrong (user error, ...).1. Install RAID card and SSD's in MP by plugging the SSD's to the RAID card via the mini SAS Fanout cable and also connecting molex power cable to the power section of the backplane connector. Make sure everything works and is seen by my MP.
Question: Which PCIe slot should I plug the RAID card into? 2, 3 and 4 are empty on my MP.
Yes, the EBC firmware can be found on the disk or on their site (have to dig, as it's buried).2. FLASH the RAID card with the EFI firmware via Firefox. I'm assuming the EFI firmware comes on the disc they provide, or can be found online.
Question: is the flashing pretty straight forward? Or are there certain steps that need to be carefully taken?
Yes.3. Clone my current SSD that has the OS on it to my new SSD.
4. Select my new SSD that is hooked up to the RAID card as my boot disc and reboot to ensure the RAID card is bootable.
5. Create my RAID 0 out of the other 3 SSD's.
6. Put my seatbelt on because my MP will be flying!
What drivers would I need to install?
Yes. Each unit (RAID card + eSATA enclosure kit) will contain the necessary drivers for their respective cards.Will they be on the disc that comes with the RAID card? Will there be one for the enclosure as well?
128K is typical for the max value on an Areca card. Set it for the largest value, and be done with it (based on file sizes used on this array will be large).Just a note ... I can create a RAID set out of the discs with the "Create RAID" function, the problem is my Mac Pro wont see the raid set. If I create the RAID set using the "Quick Create" then my Mac Pro sees the disc and ask me to initialize the disc. The only issue I see with the "Quick Create" is is only allows me to do a block size of 128KB, vs 256KB with a software RAID in OSX. Pass through works fine as well. For some reason when I use "Create RAID" my mac pro will not see the drives. So I have one disc on pass-through and the other three on a RAID 0 using the "quick create" function.
The usual firmware is BIOS, not EBC (i.e. if you download v 1.49 off of the support page). You'll need to replace the existing BOOT.BIN with the EBC based firmware located on the disk that came with the card.1. I've downloaded the firmware for the 1880i, it has BIOS, BOOT, FIRM, MBRO files. The BOOT file is the one I need to use to be able to boot from the card. I select that file and confirm changes and it does it successfully. I can select my new Boot disc from the system preferences and it boots fine. The problem is, when I remove my old boot disc, the system will not start up, it gives me a "?" when the white screen loads and will only start up once I load my old boot drive back in my mac pro. Why is it doing that and how can I prevent? I plan on selling my old boot drive.
You could disconnect the fans and see what happens, as SSD's don't run as hot as mechanicals. The only issue would be the small enclosure.2. The 4 bay enclosure has two fans, and they are very loud. So loud that I want to unhook the power cords to the fans (red and black wires) so they stop working. Do you think I'd have issues with heat if I did that? I thought SSD's run much cooler than a regular HD and isn't there a fan already up there by the optical bays? I'd much prefer yo not have those fans running but want to make sure it will be ok.
What are you using for scratch?3. Doing some benchmark test on the set of 3 SSD's in a RAID 0 show a huge gain in speed, 2000 MB/s reads and 1400 MB/s writes, but in some real world use test, I barely see a difference. For example, I regularly work on 3-4 GB files, so I opened up a 3 GB file in PS, and it only opened 1-2 seconds faster on my 3 SSD RAID set than my 1 disc caviar black. The RAID set is leaps and bounds faster but I barely noticed a difference in real world use. Is that to be expected?
I'm not sure what all you're doing yet, as details matter.I do see a big increase in speed when moving or copying large sets of files, the new RAID 0 moves 2-3x as fast as my 1 TB caviar black.
Where will I see a big performance gain? I'd think I'd notice it immensely through using my adobe cs apps and exporting large PDF's, opening huge files and saving huge files, but I don't see a difference.
The usual firmware is BIOS, not EBC (i.e. if you download v 1.49 off of the support page). You'll need to replace the existing BOOT.BIN with the EBC based firmware located on the disk that came with the card.
Once you get the above solved, then let's see if the Boot Manager is still a problem.
What are you using for scratch?
I ask, as that can make a difference (i.e. sharing the working data and scratch on the same drives will slow you down). PS seems to look for scratch, even if it's not needed (old programming code from when physical memory was super expensive that's followed through multiple revisions).
I'm not sure what all you're doing yet, as details matter.
Check the above first (scratch location), and go from there.
What you downloaded was the BIOS version.I'm not sure how to do this then. I downloaded the correct version from online, it has the four files (boot, bios, firm, MBRO). Through the web interface, I went to "upgrade firmware", selected the boot file, and updated it. It said it was done successfully. How do I replace the boot.bin file with the EBC firmware?
Keep in mind, it's still a mechanical disk, which means it has to spin up before it can be used. So disabling the Power Management (sleep) setting for the HDD's could help here.Right now its set to the 2TB caviar black, which only has about 500GB on it. I'm a graphic designer, and work in the adobe suite all day, I regularly work on larger files, 2-4GB. I also work on smaller stuff as well. I design a magazine every month also and have to export the whole layout as a PDF file. Usually takes about a minute or so to do. My new RAID set is not any faster at doing this though InDesign. I expected it to be a lot faster. Not sure what the deal is. Should I be seeing a big performance gains in regular work like I described?
That's the right location (actual firmware file is named ARC1880EBC.BIN; note EBC in it, not EFI - EBC allows it to work in both 32 and 64 bit system firmware = works in 2006 to current models, as well as future models).I cant find the EFB firmware on the disc, the only thing I see besides the MAC OSX MRAID installer is an EFI firmware folder. Inside are directions to ..."**How TO Install rEFIt Shell Environment And Invoke Areca McBIOS RAID Setup*"
Once you download the correct file (or pull it off of the disk if you prefer), it's self explanatory (same procedure as the BIOS version you've already been using - just replace BOOT.BIN, as that's what contains the boot code).I've looked and looked and cant find the EBC base firmware which is suppose to replace the BOOT.bin file. I'm also not sure how to do it once I do find the EBC firmware file. I'm just helpless![]()
I bought 6G anyway. I run now at 3Gb (Mac Pro) and within the 5 year warranty of the drives I am sure I'll get a 6Gb Mac. Instant saturation of the new bus as well. All for 50.00 more. SSD's are the one thing to move from one machine to the other.
Photoshop is the only adobe app that allows you to select a scratch disc.
Booting is working now, thank you.
The hardware is fine, so your issues are with PS. I don't know what other parts of CS5 you may use (or other applications for that matter), but some are capable of using threading to speed things up, including being able to utilize your storage configuration (i.e. After Effects or Media Encoder).Although, my overall experience with performance is very disappointing. The only area I notice any speed gains is copying or moving files. The triple striped SSD volume is quick in that area. In all the adobe apps, it's just about the same as my 2TB caviar black. Most things I do I'm not seeing any difference.
It seems that PS isn't the only application in CS5 that can allow the user to specify a scratch location.Photoshop is the only adobe app that allows you to select a scratch disc. And I'm certain that is not the issue anyway. It seems that the apps just can't take advantage of high I/O speeds.
It all comes down to the software.It would be far cheaper to use a set of 3 TB striped drives. The benchmark test for the SSD's are amazing, but real world use is still the same. I'm very shocked about this fact.
Understandable....It looks like I may be sending back the RAID card and SSD's. I have a hard time justifying spending $1400 for the setup when I don't get the performance boost that comes with it. Its going to be hard for me to do this, I LOVE watching the RAID volume run up the score on AJA System Test or XBench.